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Shafali Verma surpasses Tendulkar's 30-year-old record

Fifteen-year-old Shafali Verma became the youngest Indian cricketer to score a half-century in international cricket, surpassing Sachin Tendulkar's 30-year-old record.

Shafali's 49-ball 73 in the first T20I against West Indies powered the Indian women's team to a convincing 84-run win at Gros Islet on Saturday.


Playing in only her fifth T20I, Shafali put the West Indies attack to the sword, blasting six fours and four sixes on way to her maiden fifty at the Darren Sammy National Cricket Stadium.

Shafali achieved the feat at 15 years and 285 days, surpassing batting legend Tendulkar, who had notched up his maiden Test fifty at 16 years and 214 days.

The Haryana teenager shared a record opening stand of 143—India's highest partnership in women's T20Is—with Smriti Mandhana to help her team post a challenging 185 for four after being asked to take first strike by the hosts.

Shafali, who had scored 46 in her career's second T20I against South Africa at Surat last month, exploded in the second over, smashing Shakera Selman for two fours and a six.

She then launched an assault on Chinelle Henry, crossing the fence four times before depositing one at the stands in the fourth over. The result was that she had raced away to an 18-ball 43 at the end of the powerplay.

Shafali and Mandhana took India past the 100-mark in 10 overs before the former fell to Selman in the 16th over.

In response to India's total, West Indies were restricted to 101 for nine.

With the win, India have taken a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.

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AI does better than doctors at diagnosing emergencies, finds new study

Highlights

  • AI got the right diagnosis 67 per cent of the time.
  • Researchers say AI won't replace doctors, but will work alongside them.
  • Experts warn AI still isn't ready to be used on its own in hospitals.
A new study from Harvard found that an AI system was better than human doctors at figuring out what was wrong with emergency room patients.

Study found that AI systems outperformed human doctors in high-pressure emergency triage, making more accurate diagnoses when patients were first rushed to hospital.

Independent experts called the results a “genuine step forward” in AI clinical reasoning.

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