Kerala Man Kills Wife, Attacks Daughters, Dies By Suicide: Cops

Kerala Man Kills Wife, Attacks Daughters, Dies By Suicide: Cops

The police said an investigation has been launched into the incident. (Representational)

Kochi:

In a tragic incident, a man died by suicide after allegedly killing his wife in Ernakulam district on Sunday morning, the police said.

The incident was reported from Piravom, 31 kilometers from here.

According to police, the man also allegedly attacked his two daughters before taking the extreme step.

The injured daughters have been admitted to a hospital, and their condition is reported to be not serious.

The distressing event came to light when one of the injured daughters informed their neighbours about the incident.

The police said an investigation has been launched into the incident.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Three students get laptops under Crucial Welfare Fund in Adilabad

Collector PS Rahul Raj told students from Scheduled Castes to utilise the schemes to achieve their academic goals. He handed over laptops to beneficiaries of the Crucial Welfare Fund by the SC Welfare department.

Published Date – 02:19 PM, Sun – 31 December 23


Three students get laptops under Crucial Welfare Fund in Adilabad


Adilabad: Collector PS Rahul Raj told students from Scheduled Castes to utilise the schemes to achieve their academic goals. He handed over laptops to beneficiaries of the Crucial Welfare Fund by the SC Welfare department.

Speaking on the occasion, Rahul advised the students to excel in academics and to reach their goals. He asked them to achieve secured jobs and to bring recognition to their parents. He told them to use the laptops to learn new skills and improve their communication skills. He said that parents whose annual income was below Rs 5 lakh were eligible to avail benefits of the initiative.


The beneficiaries were Prathik, studying engineering at IIT-Tirupati, Vamshi (NIT Warangal) and Sumith from RGUKT-Basar. SC Welfare Officer B Sunitha and staffers of the department were present.

Drone Attacks On The Rise In Arabian Sea, Indian Navy's Response

Drone Attacks On The Rise In Arabian Sea, Indian Navy's Response

Indian Navy has stepped up surveillance to stop attacks on merchant ships

New Delhi:

The Indian Navy has stepped up surveillance in the north and central Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Aden following frequent security incidents on merchant vessels sailing through international shipping lanes.

Naval task groups comprising destroyers and frigates have been deployed to undertake maritime security operations and help merchant vessels in case of any incident, the navy said in a statement today.

The navy said it is also working closely with the Coast Guard to check new security risks in the Indian Ocean.

The Indian Navy’s move comes days after a merchant vessel, MV Chem Pluto, was struck by a drone 400 km off the Indian coastline. The ship with 21 crew members – 20 Indians and a Vietnamese – arrived at the Mumbai port under the protection of Coast Guard ship Vikram on December 26, two days after it was struck in the Arabian Sea.

“The last few weeks have seen increased maritime security incidents on merchant vessels transiting through international shipping lanes in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and central/north Arabian Sea,” the navy said in the statement.

“The piracy incident on MV Ruen, approximately 700 nautical miles from the Indian coast, and the recent drone attack on MV Chem Pluto, approximately 220 nautical miles southwest of Porbandar, indicates a shift in maritime incidents closer to Indian EEZ (exclusive economic zone),” the navy said.

Apart from destroyers and frigates, the navy has deployed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and maritime patrol aircraft.

Long-range maritime reconnaissance aircraft P8Is are being regularly tasked to maintain domain awareness.

The attack on MV Chem Pluto amid a flurry of new drone and missile attacks by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels on the vital Red Sea shipping lane since the start of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7, with the group claiming to act in solidarity with Gaza.

The Pentagon claimed the tanker ship was targeted by a drone “fired from Iran.” It was the first time the Pentagon openly accused Iran of directly targeting ships since the start of Israel’s war on Hamas, which is backed by Tehran.

2023: AI becomes hashtag, goes mainstream; India sets guardrails for data privacy, user safety

India enacted new laws on data privacy and storage as it moved to a higher gear to safeguard users and define the compliance framework for BigTech in 2023 when technology galloped at an unprecedented pace.

Published Date – 01:54 PM, Sun – 31 December 23


2023: AI becomes hashtag, goes mainstream; India sets guardrails for data privacy, user safety


New Delhi: India enacted new laws on data privacy and storage as it moved to a higher gear to safeguard users and define the compliance framework for BigTech in 2023 when technology galloped at an unprecedented pace.

From excitement and awe around Artificial Intelligence (AI) to the virality of OpenAI’s ChatGPT and India’s crackdown on deepfakes to New Delhi’s determined moves on digital sovereignty, dramatic twists and turns in the tech landscape defined an eventful 2023. The spotlight was clearly on the social media platforms and BigTech.


India’s resolve to safeguard netizens from new kinds of user harms emerging in the digital space was clear, as the government moved decisively to craft regulations and laws. It crafted a future-ready framework that would not just protect digital personal data but also ensure an open, safe and trusted internet backed by tighter accountability for digital and social media platforms operating in India.

The government talked tough with social media platforms after several ‘deepfake’ videos targeting leading actors, including Rashmika Mandanna, went viral, sparking public outrage and raising concerns over the weaponisation of technology for creating doctored content and harmful narratives.

It also asked platforms to act decisively on deepfakes and align their terms of use and community guidelines as per the IT rules and current laws. Further, the government made it clear that any compliance failure will be dealt with strictly and evoke legal consequences.

Globally, macroeconomic woes and growth challenges kept BigTech on the edge as companies tightened their belt and indeed their purse strings and resorted to mass downsizing at the start of 2023. Social media space continued to buzz with action amid the rising appeal of shareable, bite-sized short-form videos and the popularity of apps and memes to suit every occasion.

Elon Musk’s social media platform Twitter was rebranded as X in July 2023, and in one swift move, the familiar blue bird logo officially retired. Meta launched Twitter-rival app Threads, which scored an instant hit with millions of downloads but lost steam in the weeks that followed.

In January, the government set up three grievances appellate committees to address users’ complaints against social media and other internet-based platforms. In August, Parliament approved the Digital Personal Data Protection Bill (DPDP) aimed at safeguarding the digital personal data of 1.4 billion citizens and underlining India’s digital sovereignty.

The freshly minted law will arm individuals with greater control over their data while allowing companies to transfer users’ data abroad for processing, except to territories restricted by the Centre through notification.

It also gives the government power to seek information from firms and issue directions to block content. The law envisages the establishment of the Data Protection Board of India, tasked with monitoring compliance, inquiring into breaches, imposing penalties, and directing remedial or mitigation measures in case of data breach.

2023 was also a year when governments across the world moved to formulate rules around content accountability and confronted ethical questions as Artificial Intelligence went mainstream, holding out both the promise of a transformative future and fears of a dystopian society plagued with misinformation, AI-laced weapons, and job losses.

As machines demonstrated impressive capabilities of reasoning and human-like decisions, AI advances rivalled sci-fi movie scripts complete with doomsday prophecies. The most powerful faces of the global tech industry, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, joined the chorus of voices flagging the risk of extinction from AI on par with nuclear war and pandemics as they exhorted policymakers to move with caution.

Altman, 38, fended off his share of boardroom hi-drama as he was fired, then reinstated, in a five-day epic battle for control of a company that is at the forefront of AI. Back home, with 830 million internet users in the world’s largest ‘digitally connected democracy’ governed by a two-decades-old IT Act that lacks teeth to deal with sophisticated forms of user harm (doxxing, cyber stalking, and online trolling), the government initiated stakeholder dialogues to formulate draft ‘Digital India Act’.

The draft Bill is likely to spell out norms for emerging technologies, big tech platforms and firms, moot different obligations for various classes of intermediaries, say, e-commerce, search engines, gaming, and tighten the accountability of digital platforms in the era of rampant misinformation, deepfakes and new forms of user harms.

The bill — to be legislated after the 2024 elections and formation of the new government — is widely expected to take into account online offences, including gaslighting, cat-fishing, cryptojacking, astroturfing, doxxing, transmission of misinformation, stalking or harassment over the internet, deepfake, and cyber-mob attacks, encoding them into the list of user harms.

The bill is unlikely to have hardcoded immunity provisions for social media companies this time around and instead, the Center will notify whether any class of intermediary is eligible to claim exemptions from third-party digital content.

There has been a raging debate globally, and in India, on whether online intermediaries should be entitled to ‘safe harbour’ provisions as a ‘free pass’. The regulatory overhaul – in the works – may instead do away with such default provisions to keep the sweeping power of platforms under check.

During 2023, possibilities of AI harm galvanised policymakers globally. The US and UK opened new chapters in AI safety as nations came together for urgent conversations on the future of AI and how to maximise benefits and mitigate risks.

In December, the Global Partnership on AI, an alliance of 29 members, unanimously adopted the New Delhi declaration, pledging their commitment to a collaborative approach for AI applications that benefit people and create a global governance framework for safe and trusted AI.

Maoist party member surrenders before Mulugu SP

OSD Ashok Kumar, ASP, Eturnagaram, S Sankeerth and DSP Mulugu, N Ravinder were present when the Maoist surrendered to join the mainstream and lead a peaceful life.

Published Date – 02:07 PM, Sun – 31 December 23


Maoist party member surrenders before Mulugu SP


Mulugu: Disillusioned with the Maoist ideology, a party member of CPI (Maoist) party Pulluru Nagaraju alias Jagath (25), hailing from Pragallapalli village of Wazeedu Mandal in the district surrendered before SP Gaush Alam here on Saturday, according to a press note issued here Saturday. OSD Ashok Kumar, ASP, Eturnagaram, S Sankeerth and DSP Mulugu, N Ravinder were present when the Maoist surrendered to join the mainstream and lead a peaceful life.

Nagaraju used to work as a medical assistant in a private hospital. He was allegedly brainwashed by Sudhakar, Divisional Committee Member (DVCM), and incharge of Venkatapuram-Wazeedu Area Committee to join the CPI (Maoist) party several months ago.


On the pretext of resolving his problem, Nagaraj was called by Sudhakar and exposed to the revolutionary ideologies of the banned Maoist party. Initially, he worked as a courier to Sudhakar and supplied medicine and other items several times that were required by the Maoist party, according to the SP.

However, after joining the party he got disillusioned with the Maoist ideology and realized the fact that Maoist leaders are using innocent people of the region for their vested interests. Therefore, he decided to join the mainstream society by surrendering. A case under several sections of IPC, Sec 8(1) of the TSPS Act and Sec 4 of the Explosive Substance Act of Wazeedu police was registered against him this year.

Taking advantage of surrender-cum-rehabilitation policy of the government, he joined the mainstream society.

Dec. 30: ‘Axis of Resistance’ operations against Israeli occupation


By Press TV Website Staff

Resistance groups in Palestine and across the region continue their operations against Israel and its Western backers amid the regime’s genocidal war on the Gaza Strip, which has claimed the lives of more than 21,000 Palestinians, mostly children and women.

The operations carried out by the Palestinian and regional resistance groups on Saturday, December 30, are as follows:

Qassam Brigades’ operations on Dec. 30:

  • Completely destroyed an Israeli troop carrier north of the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip with an ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shell.
  • Detonated a Merkava tank with a ‘Shuath’ device north of Bureij camp and targeted another Merkava with an ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shell, inflicting heavy damage.
  • Targeted two Israeli military tanks and two troop carriers with ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shells and detonated a ‘Shuath’ device in a third tank.
  • Engaged in clashes with Israeli special forces in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City, killing and wounding over 20 regime soldiers.
  • Targeted a Merkava tank with a ‘Shuath’ device in the Sheikh Radwan area of ​​Gaza City.
  • Targeted concentrations of Israeli military vehicles and soldiers in Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, with mortar shells.
  • Blew up a house in Khan Yunis city with explosive devices, in which several regime soldiers were holed up, causing deaths and injuries.
  • Targeted a Merkava tank with an ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shell in the Khuza’a area, east of Khan Yunis city in southern Gaza.
  • Targeted an Israeli military infantry force holed up inside a building in the Sheikh Ajlin area in Gaza City with an anti-fortified TBG shell.
  • Shot at an Israeli soldier with a heavy-caliber M99 sniper rifle in Sheikh Ajlin, ​​Gaza City.
  • Targeted eight Israeli military tanks with ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shells in the Al-Tuffah and Al-Daraj neighborhoods in Gaza City.
  • Targeted groups of Israeli regime soldiers and vehicles east of Rafah with heavy-caliber mortar shells.
  • Targeted two Humvees with explosive devices and clashed with their members with machine guns, causing deaths and injuries in Sheikh Ajlin.
  • Targeted a gathering of Israeli regime soldiers and vehicles east of Khuza’a, south of the Gaza Strip, with a barrage of mortar shells.
  • Targeted a Merkava tank with an ‘Al-Yassin’ 105 shell in Sheikh Ajlin neighborhood.
  • Ambushed an Israeli military infantry force that had barricaded itself inside a building in the Al-Tuffah and Al-Daraj neighborhoods, killing and wounding its members.

Quds Brigade’s operations on Dec. 30:

  • Engaged in clashes with Israeli regime soldiers on the front lines north and east of the city of Khan Yunis city in southern Gaza.
  • Targeted “Nir Am” and “Mefalsim” kibbutzes with a barrage of rockets.
  • Targeted an Israeli troop carrier and two tanks with ‘Tandem’ and RPG shells in Al-Tuffah and Al-Daraj in Gaza City.
  • Targeted Israeli regime concentrations in the Bani Suhaila area, east of Khan Yunis city, with a barrage of 60-caliber regular mortar shells.
  • Targeted and destroyed an Israeli military vehicle with an explosive device east of the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip.
  • Targeted military concentrations with a barrage of 60-caliber regular mortar shells around the Mahatta area and Street 5 in Khan Yunis city.
  • Targeted Israeli regime forces east of Rafah with a barrage of mortar shells.
  • Targeted the regime’s military concentrations in the Abasan area, east of Khan Yunis, with a barrage of 60-caliber regular mortar shells.
  • Targeted military concentrations of soldiers and vehicles in the vicinity of the mills south of Deir al-Balah with a barrage of 60-caliber regular mortar shells.
  • In a joint operation with  Qassam Brigades, targeted a large gathering of Israeli soldiers and a command and control center with a concentrated rocket barrage and a barrage of mortar shells, in the land of Abu Oreiban, southeast of the Al-Zaytoun neighborhood.

Hezbollah’s operations on Dec. 30:

 Eastern sector:

  • At around 13:50 local time, a drone attack was launched on the Ramtha site in Shebaa.
  • At around 15:15 local time, Israeli regime soldiers were targeted in the Beit Hilal with appropriate weapons, confirmed casualties.
  • At around 15:30 local time, gatherings of Israeli regime soldiers in the vicinity of the Ramim barracks were targeted with appropriate weapons.

Western sector:

  • At around 12:40 local time, Israeli soldiers in the Adathir forest were targeted with appropriate weapons, confirmed casualties.

Iraqi resistance’s operations on Dec. 30:

  • Launched three separate attacks against US military bases in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region and Syria, inflicting casualties and collateral damage.
  • Launched a drone strike at US-occupied al-Harir Airbase, situated 45 kilometers (27.9 miles) north of the Erbil International Airport, causing extensive damage.
  • Fred a barrage of rockets at a US military base in al-Shaddadi town, located about 50 kilometers (31 miles) south of Syria’s northeastern city of Hasakah, resulting in damage.
  • Targeted the US-run facility in Kharab al-Jir military base in the Yarubiyah district of the same Syrian province with rockets, causing damage.


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Ukraine deadly shelling of Belgorod ‘unacceptable’: UN

The United Nations has condemned Ukraine’s deadly shelling of the Russian border city of Belgorod as “unacceptable,” which resulted in the killing of dozens of civilians.

Khaled Khiari, Assistant Secretary-General in the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (UN DPPA) called for an end to such attacks against civilians after 21 people, including two children, were killed in the attack on Saturday.

“Attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure violate international humanitarian law, are unacceptable, and must end now,” Khiari said as he briefed the Security Council at an emergency meeting convened on Saturday afternoon.

According to Khiari “the strikes were reported as among the deadliest cross-border attacks” on Russia since Moscow began its special military operation against Ukraine in February 2022.

Russia had called for the emergency meeting following the attacks on Belgorod, which is home to more than 300,000 residents.

Russia’s permanent ambassador to the UN Vasily Nebenzya also slammed Ukraine for using internationally banned cluster munitions, and Czech-produced Vampir missiles in a “deliberate act of terrorism” that targeted civilians in Belgorod.

He urged Czechia and other Western States to account for where their assistance is going.

“There’s no use pretending,” he said. “The European Union countries are complicit in the crimes committed by the gang in Kyiv.”

Nebenzya said US and UK “consultants” helped to plan the strikes on Belgorod and warned that “organizers and perpetrators” of the attack “will be punished.”

‘London behind Kiev’s terrorist act’

The Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova blamed the UK, the US, and their European allies for the large-scale attack by Kiev’s forces.

“Britain is behind the terrorist act,” Zakharova said in an audio statement, adding that London, together with Washington “have been instigating the Kiev regime” to commit terrorist acts amid the failed summer counteroffensive.

“Amid the lack of even the smallest chances to improve the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ miserable situation on the ground, [Washington and London] resorted to the tactics of terrorist attacks against civilians,” Zakharova said.

Zakharova recalled that the UK had virtually prohibited Kiev from holding talks with Moscow, focusing on a “battlefield victory” instead.

She referred to an earlier interview by a Ukrainian senior legislator, David Arakhamia.

The politician, who heads President Vladimir Zelensky’s Servant of the People party in parliament and led the Ukrainian delegation at the Istanbul talks, had told the Ukrainian TV channel 1+1 that the conflict could have ended in spring 2022.

Moscow, at that time, had offered to hold peace with Kiev in exchange for neutrality and a promise not to join NATO, he said in late November.

However, according to Arakhamia the then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who visited Kiev in early April, told Ukrainian officials not to “sign anything” with the Russians and to “just continue fighting” instead.

The Saturday attacks came after Russia launched fresh airstrikes against Ukraine, targeting the Ukrainian military facilities in the south, west, and east of the country, with heavy damage reported at multiple sites.

Fighting along the frontline in Eastern Ukraine is largely bogged down by the strong defense lines and winter weather after Kiev’s much-hyped summer counteroffensive failed to advance in any direction along the roughly 1,000 km frontier between the two countries.

‘Desperate for food’: UNRWA warns 40% of Gazans face famine risk

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees has warned that 40 percent of Gaza’s 2.3 million population are facing a “risk of famine,” as Israel ramps up attacks in the besieged territory.

Thomas White, UNRWA’s director in Gaza, on Saturday urged “sustainable” aid flow to the Gaza Strip.

“People are hungry and just desperate for food. 40% of the population at risk of famine,” he wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“More regular supplies needed – require safe and sustainable humanitarian access everywhere including to the North of Gaza,” White added.

People are hungry and just desperate for food @UNRWA convoy in #Gaza City this week.

40% of the population at risk of famine.

More regular supplies needed – require safe and sustainable #humanitarain access everywhere including to the North of Gaza pic.twitter.com/ylZ3ors6RN


— Thomas White (@TomWhiteGaza) December 30, 2023

White also said on Friday that a UN aid convoy, returning from mission to northern Gaza on a route designated for humanitarian aid, came under Israeli fire.

“Our international convoy leader and his team were not injured but one vehicle sustained damage,” White wrote on X. “Aid workers should never be a target.”

Since Israel launched the war on Gaza on October 7, the relentless air and ground blitz on the besieged Strip has killed at least 21,672 Palestinians, mostly women, and children, and injured over 56,000 others.

Israeli regime strikes have left most of the Gaza Strip in ruins, with 60 percent of the Palestinian territory’s infrastructure damaged or destroyed, and nearly 2 million residents displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water, and medicine due to a blockade imposed by the regime.

In a new food security report published earlier this month, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) warned that while the Israeli war shows no signs of abating, more than one in four households in Gaza, or more than half a million people, are grappling with extreme hunger.

“The intensification of the hostilities, further reduction in access to food, basic services, and lifesaving assistance, and the extreme concentration or isolation of people in inadequate shelters or areas without basic services are major factors that contribute to increasing this risk,” the report said.

A WFP survey conducted during the short-lived pause in fighting between November 24 and December 1 revealed that nine out of ten families in northern Gaza, and 2 out of 3 households in southern Gaza, had spent at least one full day and night without any food at all.

According to the UN Secretary-General António Guterres “the way Israel is conducting its offensive” is posing “massive obstacles” to the distribution of humanitarian aid inside Gaza.

“An effective aid operation in Gaza requires security, staff who can work in safety, logistical capacity, and the resumption of commercial activity. These four elements do not exist,” Guterres said.

Phillipe Lazzrini, head of UNRWA has said that “meaningful, unhindered and unconditional humanitarian assistance, and commercial flow,” can reverse the dire situation and prevent the deliberate famine in Gaza.

Not Kohli Or Gill! Eng Great Calls This India Star "Box Office Cricketer"

Former England captain Nasser Hussain is hopeful of a successful return of “box office” cricketer Rishabh Pant in 2024 following his recovery from the near-fatal car crash a year back. It was on a fateful December night in 2022 when Pant suffered a horrific car accident. The wicketkeeper batter has made strong progress since then and is likely to return to cricket ahead of the T20 World Cup in USA and the West Indies. “That was such a serious accident. The whole world held its breath and it has been a slow recovery,” Hussain was quoted as saying by the ICC. “You follow on social media, on my phone and the initial first walking steps to then scenes in the gym and then scenes of him playing a bit of cricket, scenes of him with Ricky (Ponting).”

“I travelled with Ricky in the summer in the Ashes, and Ricky was texting him ‘how’s the progress coming along’, and he is a box office cricketer.” Following Pant’s absence, KL Rahul has filled in to his shoes and produced a good show at the recent ODI World Cup, amassing 452 runs at an average of 75.33.

“India have done well without him (Pant) as KL has come in and been brilliant in all formats,” Hussain noted.

“They’ll continue to be brilliant. They’re lucky to have both of them, but Rishabh Pant, before his injury, was box office, and hopefully after his injury, will be box office as well.” Hussain also earmarked young opener Shubman Gill to return to form in Test cricket.

“He (Gill) had a very good three quarters, or nine tenths of 2023. You must have learned so much having the likes of Rohit Sharma at the other end,” Hussain said.

“He just fell away maybe at the end. Maybe that illness, you know, just got to him a little bit, and he’s formed just in a month. We take it far too short when we’re in the broadcasting world.

“He’s a super talent, and he’s going to be the next sensation for India for years to come. So, hopefully, he’ll have a good 2024.”

Topics mentioned in this article

Bancroft Eyes Test Opener's Role For Australia Post Warner's Retirement

Cameron Bancroft is in contention to fill the opening role after David Warner’s retirement.© X (Twitter)

Veteran Australian batter Cameron Bancroft staked a claim to the vacant opener’s slot post David Warner’s Test retirement, saying a ‘specialist’ should be considered for the position. Warner is all set to retire from Test cricket after the third match against Pakistan, beginning at his home ground SCG from January 3, 2024. In the post Warner-era, Bancroft is in contention to fill the opening role along with Marcus Harris, Matt Renshaw and Cameron Green.

“I’ve opened the batting in Shield cricket for over 10 years. It’s not an easy place to bat. It comes with challenges, and my whole career I’ve problem-solved trying to find ways to flourish in those sorts of circumstances.

“Some players have switched and gone and opened the batting and done really well. But not everyone puts their hand up to go and open the batting,” Bancroft was quoted as saying by AAP.

“I feel like it probably is a specialist position and it’s certainly a really challenging one. But a very rewarding one as well.” Bancroft was the leading run-scorer in last season’s Sheffield Shield with 945 runs at an average of 59.06, and he again tops the current season’s charts with 512 at 56.88.

“I’ve had some conversations (with selectors) over the last 12 months or so and asked some questions about what I can do to improve,” Bancroft said.

“I’m always looking to improve and get better. I wanted that feedback from them. But I guess it always comes down to scoring runs.

So, I’ve just tried to go out and do the best I can no matter what format of the game that I’ve been playing,” he added.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Topics mentioned in this article