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  • Domestic season begins on Aug 15

    Domestic season begins on Aug 15


    LAHORE:

    The Pakistan Cricket Board today announces the domestic cricket calendar for the 2025-26 season, with an emphasis on increased competitiveness, highlighted by an eight-team Quaid-e-Azam Trophy (first-class) tournament.

    The domestic season will commence on 15 August with the 12-team Hanif Mohammad Trophy (non-first-class) being staged in Karachi, Multan, Bahawalpur and Rahim Yar Khan. The teams are divided into two pools, with 31 matches scheduled in the four-day tournament. The top two sides will qualify for this season’s premier first-class competition – Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.

    The 12 regional sides participating in the Hanif Mohammad Trophy are the same teams that competed in last season’s Quaid-e-Azam Trophy. Based on last season’s standings, these are: Faisalabad, Rawalpindi, FATA, Lahore Region Blues, Hyderabad, Karachi Region Blues, Karachi Region Whites, Multan, Quetta, D.M Jamali, AJK and Larkana.

    The Quaid-e-Azam Trophy will feature Lahore Region Whites, Sialkot, Peshawar, Islamabad, Abbottabad, Bahawalpur and the two qualifying teams. The tournament is set to begin on 22 September and will comprise 29 matches in a single-league format, with the final scheduled from 3 to 7 November. Matches will be held at four venues across Islamabad and Rawalpindi, with further details to be announced in due course.

    To further enhance competitiveness, a qualifying stage has also been introduced for the National T20. 10 teams – Abbottabad, Multan, Quetta, Bahawalpur, Rawalpindi, Hyderabad, FATA, Larkana, D.M. Jamali, and AJK will compete in the qualifier round. These teams will be divided into two pools, with the top two sides progressing to the National T20 (Super 10) tournament, which will be held in Faisalabad from 1 to 12 March.

    The eight teams automatically qualified for the Super 10 stage are: Karachi Region Whites, Lahore Region Whites, Peshawar, Karachi Region Blues, Sialkot, Islamabad and Faisalabad.

    Four departmental tournaments – President’s Trophy (four-day, first-class), President’s Cup (One-Day), President’s Trophy Grade II and President’s Trophy Grade III will also feature in this domestic season. PCB Chief Operating Officer Sumair Ahmed Syed: “We are pleased to unveil a domestic structure that places merit, opportunity and competitiveness at its core. The 2025-26 season has been designed to provide a clear pathway for teams and players to progress based on performance, not reputation.

    “Introducing a qualifier for both the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and the National T20 ensures that every match in our domestic calendar carries significant weight. This not only raises the standard of competition but also fosters a high-performance culture across all formats.

    “The Quaid-e-Azam Trophy will now feature the most in-form and deserving teams, while the Hanif Mohammad Trophy gives 12 regions a meaningful chance to stake their claim. Similarly, the Super 10 format of the National T20 is a step towards creating more high-intensity, quality cricket.

    “Our aim is to reward performance and create a vibrant environment where players and teams are constantly challenged. This structure lays the foundation for a long-term growth and helps us prepare future stars for the demands of international cricket.”

    Director – Domestic Cricket Operations Abdullah Khurram Niazi: “The 2025-26 domestic season reflects our commitment to building a competitive and inclusive structure that nurtures talent at every level, from grassroots to senior cricket. By aligning our tournaments across age-group and senior formats, we are creating a clear development pathway for young cricketers.

    “We have placed equal emphasis on both regional and departmental cricket. The inclusion of a first-class and a one-day tournament exclusively for departments, along with Grade II and Grade III departmental competitions, ensures departments remain a vital pillar of our domestic cricket system.

    “We are looking forward to U15, U17 and U19 age-group tournaments this season. These competitions will serve as vital stepping stones for young talent, helping us identify and groom future national stars early in their careers.

    “Also, the top performers of the Hanif Mohammad Trophy will not only be recognised as guest players by the top regions in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, but they will also be considered for domestic contracts, a move aimed at incentivising excellence.”

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  • Grigor Dimitrov retires while leading world number one Jannik Sinner, who helps him off court

    Grigor Dimitrov retires while leading world number one Jannik Sinner, who helps him off court

    Upon seeing the three-time major semi-finalist on the floor, Sinner crossed the net to check on him and offer support. Dimitrov was tended to by an on-court doctor, first on the grass before retreating to his seat where he complained about his pectoral muscle.

    When Dimitrov returned to the court in clear pain, he knew he had to retire. He supported his arm to reach up and shake the umpire’s hands before thanking the fans, greeted by a standing ovation and monumental cheer from a sympathetic crowd.

    Sinner accompanied the world No. 21 off court, hoisting his bags over his own shoulder to help Dimitrov into the locker room. It is a sorry end to the Bulgarian’s Championships, his third consecutive tournament reaching the fourth round.

    For world number one Sinner, he will take on top 10 player Ben Shelton in the quarter-finals on Wednesday, 9 July.

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  • Exxon Mobil signals fall in second-quarter upstream profit in regulatory filing – Reuters

    1. Exxon Mobil signals fall in second-quarter upstream profit in regulatory filing  Reuters
    2. Exxon signals lower oil, gas prices could hit second-quarter profit  MarketScreener
    3. ExxonMobil stock maintains Neutral rating at Mizuho ahead of Q2 earnings  Investing.com India
    4. Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) Upgraded at Piper Sandler  MarketBeat
    5. ExxonMobil tipped to beat EPS estimates for Q2 despite oil price drag, analysts say  Proactive financial news

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  • Australia beat West Indies, clinch series

    Australia beat West Indies, clinch series


    ST GEORGE’S, GRENADA:

    Australia defeated the West Indies by 133 runs before tea on the fourth day of the second Test in Grenada on Sunday.

    Set the daunting target of 277 in a low-scoring match on a two-paced pitch which made free strokeplay almost impossible, the home side side were bundled out for 143 off 34.3 overs for the visitors to take an unbeatable 2-0 lead and extend their 20-year hold on the Frank Worrell Trophy.

    Australia now have the chance to complete a clean sweep of the three-match series when the final Test, a day/night fixture, gets underway next Saturday in Kingston, Jamaica.

    Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon led the rout with three wickets each, the left-arm fast bowler lifting his overall Test tally to 394 to fuel the tantalising prospect of reaching the 400-wicket mark in his 100th Test in the series finale.

    West Indies captain Roston Chase top scored with 34 while Shamar Joseph carved his way to 24 when the writing was already on the wall.

    Joseph had taken two of the final three Australian second innings wickets to fall at the start of the day to finish with four for 66 as the visitors were dismissed for 243.

    That haul included Alex Carey for 30 following his first innings effort of 63, important contributions lower down the order which earned him the man of the match award.

    Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc, Beau Webster and skipper Pat Cummins claimed a wicket each before lunch to have the West Indies reeling at 33 for four.

    Chase and Shai Hope started the afternoon session positively but when Hope miscued an ambitious heave at Hazlewood to give the bowler a simple lobbed catch, the match was essentially over.

    “We never really got those partnerships going with the new ball up front,” Chase observed.

    “It was always a challenging task but you have to believe. They guys have to try and stay confident and keep believing in themselves.”

    That quartet of early West Indian victims included Kraigg Brathwaite, the former captain enduring a miserable 100th Test as he was caught behind off Webster for just seven to follow on his first innings duck.

    Before his demise he had seen the departure of opening partner John Campbell, trapped leg-before by the persistently accurate Hazlewood while Keacy Carty’s tortuous stay at the crease was ended via a catch to wicketkeeper Alex Carey off Starc.

    Brathwaite was the third wicket to fall but he was to be joined in the dressing on the stroke of the lunch interval as Brandon King, dropped by Cameron Green at third slip off Cummins earlier, ran out of luck when he was comprehensively bowled to leave the West Indies innings in ruins.

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  • Anne Hathaway finally learned how to breathe while preparing for her new film ‘Mother Mary.’ It was her most challenging role yet.

    Anne Hathaway finally learned how to breathe while preparing for her new film ‘Mother Mary.’ It was her most challenging role yet.

    Anne Hathaway is a master at her craft, but that doesn’t mean it always comes easy.

    In an interview for the August issue of Vogue, Hathaway detailed the work that went into preparing for her starring role in the upcoming melodrama Mother Mary. In the David Lowery-directed film, Hathaway plays the titular pop star, who’s so famous she’s considered more of a deity than a human being. As Mother Mary spirals out, she flees and finds solace in an old friend, played by Michaela Coel.

    Bringing Mother Mary to life was, according to Hathaway, “transformational.” The veteran actress admitted that taking on the role meant surrendering her ego.

    “I had to submit to being a beginner,” she told Vogue. “The humility of that — showing up every day knowing you’re going to suck. And it has to be okay. You’re not ‘bad.’ You’re just a beginner. Getting to that mindset — I had to shed some things that were hard to shed. It was welcome. But it was hard, the way transformational experiences can be hard.”

    After recognizing that she’d have to “become material [Lowery] could craft with,” as she told Vogue, Hathaway did exactly that. Mother Mary, she added, wasn’t a role she could just “perform.” To prepare for the movie, which wrapped filming in Cologne, Germany, in 2024, Hathaway endured nearly two years of daily dance classes, which at one point ran from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. The 42-year-old star also went through intensive voice lessons so she’d be able to belt out the Mother Mary songs written by Taylor Swift-approved producer Jack Antonoff and Brat superstar Charli XCX.

    “You can’t tell me you’re angry; show me. Proprioception. That was the training, getting Annie out of her head,” Dani Vitale, the film’s choreographer, told Vogue of what she told Hathaway upon meeting her. “I remember that first day, being like, Oh no. Because she’s like a doll, you know? So pretty, so graceful. I thought, Oh God, I have to break this person.”

    But continued dance training with Vitale helped Hathaway become more in tune with her own body. Hathaway, perhaps most notably, unlocked a crucial skill: The ability to breathe.

    “I finally learned how to breathe,” Hathaway told Vogue. “My body was so locked up — I literally couldn’t take a deep breath. I’d been trying to open that space for years and I thought it was physically impossible. All my breath, it was stuck.”

    Anne Hathaway in Les Misérables. (Universal Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection)

    Hathaway has a history of throwing herself into her roles. For her 2022 Apple TV+ series WeCrashed, Hathaway went on a raw vegan diet to imitate the lifestyle of Rebekah Neumann, the wife of WeWork founder Adam Neumann, whom she played in the miniseries. The New York native, while preparing for the role of Fantine in 2012’s Les Misérables, lost 25 pounds in a matter of weeks. (She’s since called the weight loss taxing on her body and her brain.)

    But working on Mother Mary feels like even more of a departure for Hathaway, who previously spoke about her fierce dedication.

    “I’d rather not be unseated on the day [of filming] by my anxiety,” the actress told Vanity Fair in 2024. “Part of the way I can tell myself that I am okay is by having such a complete level of preparation that if I get a critical voice in my head, you can quiet it down by saying that you did everything you could to prepare.”

    Hathaway went into Mother Mary knowing that the project would be different from anything she’d ever done before — and she clearly rose to the occasion. While a release date for the film has yet to be set, it seems likely that fans will be in for a treat.

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  • The next Switch 2 restock kicks off at 7PM ET online at Walmart

    The next Switch 2 restock kicks off at 7PM ET online at Walmart

    Since its launch, the Nintendo Switch 2 has been notoriously difficult to buy, with many retailers selling out of their allotted stock within minutes. Luckily, there’s good news: starting at 7PM Eastern today, Walmart Plus members will be able to purchase Nintendo’s latest handheld console — either the standalone Switch 2 and the Mario Kart World bundle — through its website. The restock is happening just before its Walmart Deals event begins on July 8th, which lasts through July 13th.

    The standalone Switch 2 will go for $449 from Walmart. If you plan on picking up the excellent Mario Kart World, then you might as well opt for the Mario Kart World bundle, which will also be available at Walmart for $499. The bundle includes everything that comes with the Nintendo Switch 2 — a dock, a pair of Joy-Con 2 controllers, etc. — as well as a download code for a digital copy of the new Mario Kart game (valued at $79.99). It will be available as a limited-time purchase through fall (or while supplies last).

    In case you haven’t had a chance to read our review, know that the Switch 2 arrives with a number of welcome upgrades over its predecessor, with the most notable being its larger 7.9-inch LCD display. It also features an improved U-shaped kickstand, 256GB of internal storage, and a pair of magnetic Joy-Con 2 controllers, which offer mouse-like functionality in select games and a new “C” button that provides quick access to Nintendo’s in-game voice and text chat feature, GameChat. The redesigned dock, meanwhile, features a built-in ethernet port and two USB-A ports.

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  • Cameron Norrie vows to stay vocal as Carlos Alcaraz awaits at Wimbledon | Wimbledon 2025

    Cameron Norrie vows to stay vocal as Carlos Alcaraz awaits at Wimbledon | Wimbledon 2025

    Cameron Norrie said he relishes playing Carlos Alcaraz in the Wimbledon quarter-finals on Tuesday and will continue to compete with the competitive energy that has driven his success, regardless of what other people think.

    “I’m excited to play against him and I’m going to have to play my best level, and even better, to have a chance because he’s got such a diverse game,” Norrie said. “I’m going to have to be tough and bring more energy to have a chance.”

    Norrie reached the quarter-finals by holding his nerve in a bruising five-set battle with the Chilean qualifier Nicolás Jarry on Sunday. Jarry complained afterwards to Norrie about his tendency to cheer loudly after most points. “He said I was a little bit vocal and I think: ‘That’s my energy,’” Norrie said.

    The competitive drive and relentless positivity that the left‑hander displays have been key factors in his success over the years. Some players, however, are less enthused by opponents who cheer their unforced errors or after less important points. Asked last week about the impact of the crowd on their second-round match, Frances Tiafoe focused immediately on Norrie’s cheering: “He was super‑amped,” Tiafoe said. “He was saying ‘c’mon’ from the first game, which is definitely annoying, but that part bothered me more than the crowd.”

    Norrie also tends to encourage himself in French and Spanish, which led to a tense moment with the Spaniard Roberto Carballés Baena in Metz last November after the British player recovered to seal a three-set win: “You say ‘vamos!’ all the time, looking right in my face,” Carballes Baena said. Norrie then offered a self-deprecating response: “A couple of ‘vamoses’ and you get pissed off?” he said. “I’m playing so bad, so I had to fire myself up.”

    As he looked to his upcoming match against Alcaraz, Norrie, 29, took these criticisms in his stride: “[When] a couple of people have not been too happy with it, I think it’s been in a big match. I think they want to win the match as well, so it’s understandable to maybe take it personally. But for me, I’m just aiming it at my team and aiming it at some people and some friends in the crowd.

    “I think [against Jarry] it was a match where there’s some moments with not a lot happening. I think some of the points are maybe not worthy of saying ‘vamos’ or saying ‘c’mon’ but it was a match that I really had to do that, because those points that don’t mean a lot, if you lose those ones, you can get broken, and the match can go away from you very quickly.”

    Cameron Norrie plays a shot as he closes in on the epic, five-set victory over Nicolás Jarry on Sunday. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

    To his credit, Norrie keeps the same energy regardless of his opposition. After their match at the Italian Open in 2023, Novak Djokovic also took issue with Norrie’s frequent fist‑pumping. As he faces off against Alcaraz, the two-time defending champion and French Open champion who is on a 22‑match winning run, Norrie vowed that he will not shy away from the occasion.

    “There’s a lot of big matches, and we’re playing and we’re competing for [our] livelihood out there. So I want to compete as hard as I can, and I’m not going to tank matches and roll over matches for someone else. I’m doing it for myself, I’m not doing it to make someone else feel bad, or not doing it for that. If they take it personally, it’s nothing to do with me.”

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    Despite the gulf between their achievements, tennis is a game of match-ups and Norrie has at least caused Alcaraz trouble. The Spaniard has won four and lost two against Norrie but the Briton has won two of their past three meetings. At times, Norrie has been able to wear the world No 2 down with his shot tolerance and physicality, luring him into lengthy rallies and exposing Alcaraz’s lack of patience. The pair have a great relationship and train together frequently at tournaments.

    “Facing Cam is always really, really difficult,” Alcaraz said. “We have really difficult battles. For me facing him is almost a nightmare, to be honest. Really tough from the baseline. I’m not surprised he’s in the quarter-final playing great tennis because I’ve seen him practising. When he lost at Queen’s [Club], he stayed for five days practising morning, afternoon and night. I saw him. So I’m not surprised at all seeing his level.”

    Alcaraz, though, has improved dramatically since Norrie won their most recent meeting, in the 2023 Rio Open final. He presents a completely different challenge across best-of-five-sets at grand slams and the grass courts only accentuate his complete game. The Spaniard will enter Centre Court as the clear favourite in his pursuit of a third Wimbledon title .

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  • Herpes Zoster Vaccination Delays Dementia — Vax-Before-Travel

    Herpes Zoster Vaccination Delays Dementia — Vax-Before-Travel

    (Vax-Before-Travel News)

    Over the past decade, numerious herpes zoster cases were prevented with two doses of a U.S. FDA-approved vaccine that contains an adjuvant. According to new research, there may be an additional, measurable benefit from vaccination.

    A Brief Communication published by NPJ Vaccines on June 25, 2025, reported a lower risk of dementia associated with AS01-adjuvanted vaccination against shingles.

    In propensity-score matched cohort studies involving 436,788 individuals, both the AS01-adjuvanted shingles and respiratory syncytial virus vaccines, administered individually or in combination, were associated with a reduced risk of dementia at 18 months.

    AS01 may protect against dementia through specific immunological pathways.

    In particular, stimulation of toll-like receptor 4 with monophosphoryl lipid A (MPL; one of the components of the AS01 system) has been shown to improve Alzheimer’s disease pathology in mice.

    In addition, the two main ingredients of AS01, MPL and QS-21 (a purified plant extract derived from Quillaja saponaria), act synergistically to activate macrophages and dendritic cells, triggering an age-independent cytokine cascade that culminates in the production of interferon gamma (IFN-γ).

    IFN-γ might attenuate amyloid plaque deposition (as seen in mice) and is negatively correlated with cognitive decline in cognitively unimpaired older adults.

    These neuroprotective mechanisms may reach their full potential at or below the dose of AS01 administered within a single vaccine, so that administering both the AS01 shingles and RSV vaccines does not provide any additional benefits.

    This saturation effect could also explain why the level of protection against dementia appears similar between the AS01 shingles vaccine (which is given in two doses) and the AS01 RSV vaccine (administered as a single dose).

    No difference was observed between the two AS01-adjuvanted vaccines, suggesting that the AS01 adjuvant itself plays a direct role in reducing the risk of dementia.

    A previous study found similar cross-protection benefits.

     In July 2024, a University of Oxford-led study concluded that receiving the recombinant Shingrix® vaccine was associated with a 17% increase in diagnosis-free time, translating into 164 additional days lived without a diagnosis of dementia in those subsequently affected.

    As of July 7, 2025, shingles vaccination services are offered at most pharmacies in the United States.

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  • BRICS slams Trump tariffs, condemns strikes on Iran

    BRICS slams Trump tariffs, condemns strikes on Iran





    BRICS slams Trump tariffs, condemns strikes on Iran – Daily Times

































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  • Rare form of leprosy infected people in Americas before European arrival, 4,000-year-old bones suggest

    Bones from 4,000-year-old human skeletons discovered in Chile contain evidence of a rare form of Hansen’s disease, also known as leprosy, ancient DNA reveals.

    Whereas the more common form of leprosy known today is caused by a bacterium called Mycobacterium leprae, these skeletons had evidence of a different, rarer form of the disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium lepromatosis. The findings, published June 30 in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, suggest that the two leprosy-causing bacteria evolved separately, on opposite sides of the globe, for thousands of years.

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