HISTORY IN HARARE! 🇿🇼🏏
The Chevrons have secured their LARGEST-EVER Test victory by innings margin, crushing Bangladesh by an innings and 85 runs.
A monumental statement from this squad:
🔹 Innocent Kaia anchors the innings with a brilliant maiden Test century: 140.
🔹 Zimbabwe’s 4th innings victory in Test history — and 2nd in less than a year.
🔹 Back-to-back Test assignments won for the first time.
🔹 Richard Ngarava becomes only the 3rd Zimbabwe captain to win on Test captaincy debut, after Stuart Carlisle in 2001 and Brendan Taylor in 2011.
🔹 Blessing Muzarabani moves to 73 wickets, passing Henry Olonga and Paul Strang to become Zimbabwe’s 3rd all-time leading Test wicket-taker.
The blueprint is taking shape.
Proud day to be a Zim cricket fan. 💎🔥
#ZIMvBAN #CricketZimbabwe #Chevrons #TestCricket
One of the guys who is quietly doing his job well and preparing players for the national team is Erick Chauluka.
He is an unsung hero. Took the ‘A’ side to Bangladesh and got positive results. He had 4 different guys scoring hundreds in just a few days of cricket that were possible due to rain.
He pushed the guys hard, in one of the game advised them to enforce follow-on. On paper the game was done but guys believed and nearly got a result had rain not intervened.
You cannot rush life. Things happen when they are supposed to happen. Your role is to show up everyday and give it your best. Your best will not be the same everyday. There are days you’ll be motivated and some you’ll feel defeated. And such is life! Keep keeping on!
The biggest skill you can develop is the ability to reset fast. Bad conversation? Move on. Bad day? Start fresh tomorrow. Missed workout? Hit it the next day. Poor decision? Learn and adjust. You can’t control what happens to you, but you control how long you let it affect you.
It’s an elite mindset to live like everything is going to work out. Not necessarily being blindly optimistic, but just knowing whatever happens, you’ll figure it out
T’s a chooseday and we choose Nonhlanhla Nyathi our very own whose journey started at the age of 17 at Takashinga (2005) and in the same year played for Mashonaland (2005) She went on to represent Zimbabwe in 2006 at the Africa qualifiers in Kenya and
Flash back to the day the legend Trevor Nyasha Garwe played his last first class game which was game number 102🥶Legend Trevor is a former Eagles player who made his ODI debut for🇿🇼 in 2009. Coach:Eagles Women in 2020-2023 and Head Coach:U19 Women’s from 2024-date 🦅🧡We fly high
Before the fame. Before the millions. Before the headlines. 👀
Catch cricket’s next superstars at the ICC U19 World Cup, starting 15 January 🇿🇼🏏
No ticket? No problem 😎
🎟️ Free entry
Real cricket. Real talent. Real vibes. Pull through! 🔥
We’re in the kitchen👩🍳something is cooking !🤭Guess what it is and stand a chance to win an Eagles jersey signed by any player of your choice , first to get it right wins😁💪We fly high🦅🧡🧡
Do you want to be part of the Eagles fam!?Here is step one of how you can do it,join our supporters group and stay up to date on how they do it as Eagles supporters 🧡🧡🦅Link⬇️⬇️
https://t.co/DGFKsgANkp
Mwana wese kuEagles haikona kusara😂💪
Just stick to the fucking plan. Your plan was made when your mind was clear and nothing was distracting you. Stop improvising as long as you’re not done with the goals you’ve already set. You made that plan for a reason. You sat down, thought it through, mapped out exactly what you needed to do. That version of you knew what mattered. But then life starts happening and suddenly you’re chasing every new opportunity that appears. Every shiny object that crosses your path looks like the answer. It’s not. It’s a distraction. Not everything that shines is made of gold. When you keep switching directions, you guarantee failure. You spread yourself thin. You finish nothing. You build nothing. Stick to what you decided when you were thinking clearly. Execute the plan you made. Finish what you started before you go chasing something new. One thing at a time.
Repetition rewires
Repetition rewires
Repetition rewires
As a neuroscientist, I can tell you: the brain doesn't distinguish between the habits that serve you and the ones that destroy you.
The question isn't whether you'll change, but what you'll become.