Cricket: Kyle Jamieson shines for Black Caps on day one against Pakistan
3 Jan, 2021 06:30 AM
4 minutes to read
Dylan Cleaver and Andrew Alderson review the opening day of the 2nd New Zealand-Pakistan cricket test at Hagley Oval which featured Kyle Jamieson’s 3rd 5-wicket bag in his 6th test and Azhar Ali making a robust 93. Video / Andrew Alderson
Dylan Cleaver and Andrew Alderson review the opening day of the 2nd New Zealand-Pakistan cricket test at Hagley Oval which featured Kyle Jamieson’s 3rd 5-wicket bag in his 6th test and Azhar Ali making a robust 93. Video / Andrew Alderson
There s a thrill unlike anything else in cricket when you watch a fast bowler on top of his game; a quick who looks like taking a wicket with every delivery.
All evidence to the contrary notwithstanding? I wouldn t extrapolate the future based on the dysfunctional leadership of Trump which is set to expire in only .
Former Japan PM Shinzo Abe to face questioning in parliament over funding scandal theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print article The fire was already burning out of control by the time Lauren McIver-O’Hara and her children pulled into the driveway of their Big Lake home Friday evening. They couldn’t save anything inside all their possessions, Christmas presents and 17 pets. Now McIver-O’Hara and her 10-, 15- and 17-year-old children are staying with a friend as a supportive community gathers donations, including a trailer they can live in soon. Her 48-year-old husband, Robert McIver, can’t be there to help. He’s been hospitalized with COVID-19 for nearly two weeks. “He doesn’t think that he’ll make it home for Christmas and we’re all really bummed about that,” McIver-O’Hara said Wednesday morning before heading to work at the Alaska Club in Wasilla. “But it is what it is. We want him home but we also want him healthy.”
Print article For the third time since March, Anchorage has closed bars and restaurants for indoor service. And for the third time, daily COVID-19 case numbers have dropped. “The big question is what’s driving that, and have these emergency orders, in particular in Anchorage, have they made a difference?” said Dr. Tom Hennessy, University of Alaska Anchorage epidemiologist. Case numbers in Anchorage soared in November, leading to Acting Mayor Austin Quinn-Davidson’s consideration of business closures that she ultimately enacted for the month of December. But the decision elicited an outcry from vocal detractors, especially in the hospitality industry, who said the move was too heavy-handed.