Tag: draw

  • Indian oil & gas supervisor in Qatar wins Rs 2 cr in latest Mahzooz draw

    Indian oil & gas supervisor in Qatar wins Rs 2 cr in latest Mahzooz draw

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    Doha: A 36-year-old Qatar-based Indian expatriate won the guaranteed raffle prize of one million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,66,323) in the latest Mahzooz draw.

    The winner of the draw Sumair Singh— matched five out of the six winning numbers during the weekly Mahzooz draw held on Saturday, April 29.

    Sumair, working at an offshore oil rig, the oil and gas supervisor is out in the sea for six weeks at a time. He will visit the UAE to collect the cheque in the next ten days.

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    The same draws saw a total of 41 lucky winners sharing the second prize of 200,000 Dirhams (Rs 44,53,447)  each winning 4,878 Dirhams (Rs 1,08,619) another 1,379 winners matching three out of five numbers and receiving 250 Dirhams (Rs 5,566) each.

    How to participate in Mahzooz draw?

    To participate in the draw, people have to buy a bottle of water for 35 Dirhams (Rs 779) and receive a ticket with it.

    People can participate by registering at Mahzooz’s official website.

    Those who match six numbers will share a cash prize of not less than Dirhams 50 million (Rs 1,11,40,53,028). Winners who match five numbers will be able to claim a stake of Dirhams one million (Rs 2,22,81,060), which may increase depending on the number of players present.

    People who match four numbers will get a cash prize of Dirhams 1000 (Rs 22,280) and players who match three numbers will get Dirhams 35 (Rs 779) or play free.

    Participants have to match seven numbers to win the grand prize of Dirhams 100 million (Rs 2,22,80,51,824), the biggest prize on offer in the UAE. No one has won the first prize yet.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Borussia Dortmund’s Bundesliga hopes hit by draw against struggling Bochum

    Borussia Dortmund’s Bundesliga hopes hit by draw against struggling Bochum

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    The Bundesliga leaders Borussia Dortmund’s title chances suffered a serious blow on Friday after they stumbled to a 1-1 draw at struggling Bochum.

    Dortmund are on 61 points, two points clear of second-placed Bayern Munich with four matches remaining, who will move top if they beat bottom club Hertha Berlin on Sunday.

    The visitors went 1-0 down after five minutes following Anthony Losilla’s thunderous strike from just outside the penalty area. Yet Bochum’s joy only lasted two minutes as the unmarked Karim Adeyemi tapped in at the far post.

    The equaliser failed to inject any urgency into Dortmund’s performance, however, despite the coach Edin Terzic urging them on from the sidelines.

    Their best chances in the second half only came after the introduction of Marco Reus in the 73rd minute, with the midfielder setting up Youssoufa Moukoko, but his effort was parried by the Bochum goalkeeper Manuel Riemann.

    Riemann pulled off a better save in the 76th to deny Jude Bellingham before Donyell Malen, who had scored in the previous five games, put the ball just wide with a backheel.

    With Terzic booked for dissent after the 90-minute mark, Dortmund ran out of time, and will have to wait for Sunday’s result in Munich to find out how their title chances look.

    In Italy, meanwhile, Napoli fans preparing to celebrate the club’s first league title since 1990 have been told to steer clear of Mount Vesuvius, the volcano that overlooks the southern city of Naples.

    National park authorities became concerned at reports that Napoli’s fans plan to set off flares to light up Vesuvius should the team clinch the title on Sunday.

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    Runaway leaders Napoli will secure the club’s third Serie A crown if they beat visitors Salernitana, and second-placed Lazio drop points against Internazionale at San Siro.

    “We are all pleased for Napoli’s success which will bring honour to our region and great joy for people,” said the Vesuvius park commissioner, Raffaele De Luca. “But the celebrations must remain within the limits of civil behaviour.”

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    #Borussia #Dortmunds #Bundesliga #hopes #hit #draw #struggling #Bochum
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Baillie Gifford winner of winners James Shapiro: ‘I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction’

    Baillie Gifford winner of winners James Shapiro: ‘I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction’

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    Serendipity dictated that the American writer and academic James Shapiro received the Baillie Gifford prize for nonfiction’s Winner of Winners award, given to celebrate its 25th year, at a ceremony in Edinburgh. In his teens and early 20s, Shapiro tells me as we talk over Zoom the morning after his victory, he would often hitchhike from London to the Edinburgh festival as part of his immersion in the plays of Shakespeare. This period in his life sowed the ground for his acclaimed book, 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare, first published in 2006. He was, he explains, recovering from the “awful experience” of studying the playwright in middle school; every summer for several years, he would save up enough money to come to the UK on a Freddie Laker plane, “where you could fly from New York to London for $100 round trip and sleep in church basements and for 50p see spectacular productions”.

    In London, Stratford and Edinburgh, he’d see 25 plays in as many days, “and they’re all tattooed inside my skull to this day. The greatest one I saw was Richard Eyre’s Hamlet at the Royal Court in 1980 or so. Richard wrote me a note this morning, and it was so moving to me because that’s where it came from, seeing productions like his.”

    Shapiro is passionate about viewing Shakespeare through the lens of performance, the better to understand how central political and social context is to his work. He is currently advising on Tony Award-winning director Kenny Leon’s production of Hamlet for the Public Theater in New York, set in a post-Covid 2021 and starring Ato Blankson-Wood as the prince. It is, says Shapiro, “a Hamlet that speaks to the now. And I have the street cred, as we say in Brooklyn, to tell Shakespeare purists, whatever that means, that these plays have always spoken to the moment. And to think that what Olivier did or Kenneth Branagh for that matter is where Shakespeare stops, is to be as unShakespearean in one’s thinking about Shakespeare as possible.”

    James Shapiro with his Baillie Gifford winning book 1599.
    James Shapiro with his Baillie Gifford winning book 1599. Photograph: The Baillie Gifford Prize

    His vision for 1599, a microscopic look at the critical year in Shakespeare’s life when he was working on Henry V, Julius Caesar, As You Like It and the first draft of Hamlet, was not initially endorsed. His application for a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in the US in the late 1980s was turned down twice, he remembers. “I wasn’t discouraged by that. I just felt they didn’t understand that I was trying to do something different.” The “something different” was to understand the immense anxieties of the age: the country poised on the brink of invading Ireland with a 16,000-strong force; the fear that Elizabeth I’s reign was approaching its end with no clear successor in sight; the strengthening possibility of another Spanish Armada. It’s no coincidence, says Shapiro, that Hamlet opens with men on the ramparts, nervously watching for hostile forces.

    He was also frustrated with an academic orthodoxy that relied on speculation and anecdote, as well as an outmoded concept of the playwright: “The Shakespeare that existed when I was writing that book was still very influenced by Coleridge’s sense that Shakespeare was from another planet, or Ben Jonson’s line: he was not of an age but for all time. And that just struck me as completely wrong.” Instead, Shapiro wanted to ground Shakespeare in reality, finding out what the weather was each day of that single year, who he met, where he travelled.

    Shapiro is also a judge on this year’s Booker prize for fiction, and he is fascinating on the distinction between his work and that of novelists. He admires “the way that creative minds can tease out things that are less visible to those of us who deal in facts”. How does he feel about historical novelists – indeed, about a work such as Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, a reimagining of Shakespeare’s family that has just been adapted for stage by the RSC?

    He reveres Hilary Mantel, who was, he says, “a great historian, as well as a great novelist.” And he is, he replies, very happy for O’Farrell: “She deserves great success for that and for her more recent book, but it’s not a book that I can read comfortably, because it’s fiction.”

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    “I draw a very sharp line between fiction and nonfiction,” he adds. “I think that the danger of fiction is to sentimentalise. So that’s one of the things that I’m extremely careful as a Shakespearean not to do. On the other hand, I understand how deeply people want to connect with Shakespeare the man, with Anne Hathaway, with Judith Shakespeare: they lived, they died, their internal lives went largely unrecorded. And it takes a talented writer to bring that to life. But that’s not the stuff that I do. I don’t write that; but somebody needs to.”

    His next work is called Playbook, and will focus on America’s Federal Theatre Project of the 1930s, a progressive attempt to bring drama to mass audiences that was targeted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Then, as now, and as in the 16th century, theatre is powerful, and Shapiro intends to do everything he can to defend it.

    • 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare by James Shapiro (Faber & Faber, £14.99). To support The Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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    #Baillie #Gifford #winner #winners #James #Shapiro #draw #sharp #line #fiction #nonfiction
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • UAE: 28-year-old Bhutanese barista wins Rs 2 cr in Mahzooz Draw

    UAE: 28-year-old Bhutanese barista wins Rs 2 cr in Mahzooz Draw

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    Abu Dhabi: A 28-year-old United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based Bhutanese barista won the guaranteed raffle prize of one million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,62,648) in the latest Mahzooz draw.

    The winner of the draw Tandin Wangchuk– matched five out of the six winning numbers during the weekly Mahzooz draw held on Saturday, April 22.

    Tandin, who works at a coffee shop in Al Ain, is also the first expat from Bhutan to win such a prize with Mahzooz. He has been living in the UAE for the past five years.

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    “I will be using some of my prize money for the wedding expenses. I may also make a few investments back home in Bhutan and help a few of my friends who have been supporting me during my time here in the UAE,” Tandin told The National News.

    How to participate in Mahzooz draw?

    To participate in the draw, people have to buy a bottle of water for 35 Dirhams (Rs 779) and receive a ticket with it.

    People can participate by registering at Mahzooz’s official website.

    Those who match six numbers will share a cash prize of not less than Dirhams 50 million (Rs 1,11,40,53,028). Winners who match five numbers will be able to claim a stake of Dirhams one million (Rs 2,22,81,060), which may increase depending on the number of players present.

    People who match four numbers will get a cash prize of Dirhams 1000 (Rs 22,280) and players who match three numbers will get Dirhams 35 (Rs 779) or play free.

    Participants have to match seven numbers to win the grand prize of Dirhams 100 million (Rs 2,22,80,51,824), the biggest prize on offer in the UAE. No one has won the first prize yet.

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    #UAE #28yearold #Bhutanese #barista #wins #Mahzooz #Draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dubai Duty Free draw: 47-yr-old German CEO wins Rs 8 crore

    Dubai Duty Free draw: 47-yr-old German CEO wins Rs 8 crore

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    Abu Dhabi: A 47-year-old CEO from Germany won the grand prize of one million dollars (Rs 8,17,55,050) in the latest Dubai Duty Free (DDF) Millennium Millionaire draw that took place on Wednesday, April 26.

    The winner of the draw Marc Briese— won one million dollars in Millennium Millionaire Series 421 after buying the lucky ticket number 3982, which he had purchased online on April 8 on his way to Bangkok, Thailand.

    Marc Briese is based in Seevetal, and works as a CEO for a logistics company in Hamburg, Germany. He has been participating in the Dubai Duty Free promotion for the past eight years.

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    He plans to buy a house and share some with his family.

    Other winners

    49-year-old Ajith Pushparajan, an Indian national based in Dubai won a Mercedes Benz S500 (Selenite Grey) car, with ticket number 1300 in Finest Surprise Series 1837, which he purchased online on March 30.

    Another winner, 35-year-old Mahesh Venkat, an Indian national based in Umm Al Quwain won a BMW R nine T Pure (Mineral Grey Metallic) motorbike, with ticket number 1023 in Finest Surprise Series 536 which he purchased online on April 5.

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    #Dubai #Duty #Free #draw #47yrold #German #CEO #wins #crore

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Jamie Vardy salvages draw for dogged Leicester to leave Leeds frustrated

    Jamie Vardy salvages draw for dogged Leicester to leave Leeds frustrated

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    As the final whistle blew Jamie Vardy could not stop smiling but Patrick Bamford looked consumed by mental anguish.

    Leicester’s former England striker had stepped off the substitutes’ bench to score a potentially season‑changing equaliser before Leeds’s centre‑forward missed a late, albeit potentially offside, sitter and decidedly mixed emotions swirled in the cool West Yorkshire air.

    Some home fans called for the head of Victor Orta, Leeds’s director of football, but frustration was mixed with pride at the end of an evening in which Javi Gracia’s side had taken the lead through Luis Sinisterra as they arrested a dramatic recent slump.

    Leeds are now two points and two places above the bottom three and their hopes of avoiding relegation seem touch and go but they could at least reflect on a resilient performance which prevented Leicester from making their technical superiority count.

    “After competing as we did it is hard to get only one point,” Gracia said. “The players and all the people who love this club are suffering; it’s difficult to manage at this moment.”

    VAR rules out Youri Tielemans’ strike owing to an offside from Boubakary Soumaré
    VAR rules out Youri Tielemans’ strike owing to an offside from Boubakary Soumaré. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/Colorsport/Shutterstock

    One point and one place beneath Leeds, Dean Smith’s men are in even deeper trouble and face a potential watershed home date with Everton on Monday night. Yet despite an enduring inability to keep clean sheets they should draw hope from the manner in which they forced Leeds ever deeper during a nervy second half.

    Gracia’s players still arrested a losing run which had seen them concede 13 goals in three games. The interim manager resisted a considerable clamour to drop Illan Meslier, following a string of recent errors on the 23-year-old Frenchman’s part and was rewarded with a fine performance from a goalkeeper whose once seemingly superhuman confidence had latterly appeared shot to pieces.

    Meslier certainly could not have been expected to save the rising 20‑yard Youri Tielemans shot which whizzed past him in the sixth minute. He and Leeds looked crestfallen but they were rescued by a VAR review which detected an offside against Boubakary Soumaré during the fallout from the improperly cleared James Maddison corner prefacing Tielemans’ disallowed rocket.

    Maddison’s deliveries are often integral to Leicester successes and the same goes for Leeds’s Jack Harrison. Sure enough from Weston McKennie’s clever reverse pass Harrison sent a wonderful cross curving towards the onrushing Sinisterra.

    Thanks partly to Bamford’s smart decoy manoeuvre Sinisterra lost Timothy Castagne as he outleapt all comers to direct a header beyond Daniel Iversen’s reach. As Elland Road celebrated Gracia stood still with his arms folded and his impression impenetrable.

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    With Harvey Barnes subjecting Luke Ayling to an exacting workout and Sinisterra limping off after a tangle with Caglar Soyuncu, tempting fate certainly seemed unwise.

    Happily for Gracia, Ayling, Liam Cooper, McKennie and company had remembered how to tackle and, protecting Meslier admirably, answered most questions Maddison and friends asked them. Both Rodrigo, deployed in the No 10 role, and Bamford proved impressive when it came to defending from the front.

    Although Smith’s side shaded possession, Leeds’s new‑found capacity for making things scrappy dictated they could not do too much with it.

    Or at least not until Vardy assumed centre stage and began raging against the dying of the light. Shortly after Vardy’s introduction Kelechi Iheanacho forced Meslier into a brilliant double save, involving the goalkeeper repelling his initial shot before keeping out the substitute Patson Daka’s follow‑up from the rebound. No matter that a linesman flagged the second effort offside, many spectators at Elland Road were on their feet and applauding. “All players have ups and downs,” Gracia said. “But Illan’s a great keeper.”

    Luis Sinisterra receives medical attention
    Luis Sinisterra opened the scoring before being forced off with injury. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

    Meslier saved smartly again from Iheanacho before the striker, Maddison and Vardy combined superbly to silence the stadium. Stealing in from the inside left channel, Vardy lost Robin Koch before placing a right‑foot shot across the helpless Meslier. It was his second goal of the season and first in six months.

    Suddenly Leeds were on the ropes and looked mighty relieved when Vardy had a second “goal” disallowed for offside before Iversen quite brilliantly repelled Marc Roca’s header from a corner and then an unmarked Bamford sidefooted wide with the keeper wrongfooted. Gracia’s insistence a VAR review would have ruled any goal out for offside was kind and quite possibly accurate but probably proved scant consolation.

    “I’m a tad disappointed,” Smith said. “We could have lost it at the end but it’s nice to have Jamie Vardy scoring again.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Hyderabad: With a mix of fun and tradition, Melas continue to draw crowds

    Hyderabad: With a mix of fun and tradition, Melas continue to draw crowds

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    Hyderabad: In this age of technology and dazzling malls, age-old concepts of entertainment still seem to be drawing the curiosity of the public. One of those things are ‘Melas’ or fairs, which are now drawing crowds.

    Post Eid-ul-Fitr too, families often head to fun fairs with children enjoy joy rides there. Sitting on a hand-pulled ferris-wheel, eating ‘chat pata’ food and buying balloons and toys all sound like things that belong to a new generation ago. And the tradition continues even today, and it’s a mix of nostalgia for parents as well.

    One such fun fair was organized at the Noori Palace function hall at Bandlaguda in Hyderabad, which seemed to attract quite a lot of people in spite of it being Eid on Sunday.

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    Joy rides, food stalls, horse and camels rides, games and cosmetic stalls were all part of it the set up here. The next few days after Eid, many families move out to relax after a strenuous month which keeps many awake for 16 to 18 hours.

    “The routine schedule is disturbed as people wake up for Sehar and sleep late after offering Taraveeh namaz. Work for women particularly is tasking so for a break and relaxing many come out after festival,” said Zahooruddin, a resident of Chandrayangutta.

    Other parts of Hyderabad where one can find such fairs are Parade Grounds in Secunderabad. On holidays, huge crowds are also seen in Necklace Road, Nehru Zoological Park and other picnic spots in the city.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Watch: Hyderabadi medical coder wins Rs 22 cr in Mahzooz draw

    Watch: Hyderabadi medical coder wins Rs 22 cr in Mahzooz draw

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    Abu Dhabi: A 38-year-old United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based Hyderabadi woman has been revealed as the winner of one million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,28,303) in the weekly Mahzooz draw.

    The winner of the draw Hameda Begum– matched five out of the six winning numbers during the 122nd weekly Mahzooz draw held on Saturday, April 1.

    Hameda Begum, from Hyderabad, India, who works as a medical coder in UAE. She has been living in the UAE’s capital Abu Dhabi from the past three years.

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    “I’ve never entered a raffle or won anything in my life so this has been a delightful surprise to me. For me, this is a dream come true, and I can’t believe it,” Hameda told Gulf News.

    Hameda is planning to spend her winning for her four children’s education and secure her family’s future.

    Hameda is the first female and the fourth millionaire to win the guaranteed one million Dirhams under the new prize structure.

    Watch the video below

    On March 4, the draw revamped its prize pool, introducing a new feature where every week one participant becomes a guaranteed millionaire.

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    #Watch #Hyderabadi #medical #coder #wins #Mahzooz #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Qatar: 41-yr-old Indian expat woman wins Rs 2 cr in Mahzooz draw

    Qatar: 41-yr-old Indian expat woman wins Rs 2 cr in Mahzooz draw

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    Abu Dhabi: A 41-year-old Qatar-based Indian expatriate woman has been crowned as the fifth ‘guaranteed’ winner of one million Dirhams (Rs 2,22,22,720).

    The winner of the draw Rinza Firoz, holding the raffle ID number 32718522— matched five out of the six winning numbers during the 119th weekly Mahzooz draw held on Saturday, April 8, 2023.

    Rinza, who works as a coordinator for a pipeline supply service. She has been living in Qatar for the past 18 years with her husband and two children.

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    “I couldn’t believe it. I was shocked and spellbound when I was checking my Mahzooz account while speaking with the Mahzooz team on the phone,” Rinza was quoted as saying by Gulf News.

    She plans to use the money for her eldest daughter, who is preparing to attend university.

    On March 4, the draw revamped its prize pool, introducing a new feature where every week one participant becomes a guaranteed millionaire.

    The next Mahzooz live draw will be held on Saturday, April 15, at 9 pm (UAE time). Participants can register on the Mahzooz app and website and purchase a bottle of water for 35 Dirhams (Rs 785).

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    #Qatar #41yrold #Indian #expat #woman #wins #Mahzooz #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Saudi, Pakistani nationals win Rs 8 crore each in DDF draw

    Saudi, Pakistani nationals win Rs 8 crore each in DDF draw

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    Abu Dhabi: A Saudi and Pakistani national won the grand prize of one million dollars (Rs 8,18,49,600) each in Dubai Duty-Free (DDF) draw held in Concourse D of Dubai International Airport on Wednesday evening, April 12, 2023.

    66-year-old Salem A, a retired IT consultant from Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia, became a winner of one million dollars in Millennium Millionaire Series 419 after buying the lucky ticket number 3516, which he had purchased online on March 27.

    Salem was ecstatic to hear the news that he was now a dollar millionaire.

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    “There are no words for what I feel at the moment, but in one word, really, really thank you Dubai Duty-Free from the bottom of my heart. This came at a very good time,” Salem told Gulf News.

    He is the 11th Saudi national to win a million dollars since the inception of the Millionaire promotion in 1999.

    Second winner— 42-year-old Abdul Ahad, a Pakistani national based in Bahrain, also won one million dollars in Millennium Millionaire Series 420 with ticket number 1890, which he purchased online on April 3.

    Abdul Ahad, works as an administrator for a restaurant and has been living in Bahrain for the past five years.

    He is the 24th Pakistani national to have won one million dollars since the start of the promotion.

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    #Saudi #Pakistani #nationals #win #crore #DDF #draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )