Sports
110 Years of Boxing at Royal College
Boxing is one of the oldest sports at Royal College, Colombo. According to the “History of Royal College– 1985 – 2010”, written by a distinguished old boy, Larlasri Fernando, the school founded in 1835 by Rev. Joseph Marsh, was first known as the Hill Street Academy and housed on Wolfendall Street, Colombo and became the Colombo Academy in January 1836, when it was shifted to San Sebastian Hill. Thereafter in 1881 under Principal J.B. Cull, with the patronage of the then colonial government Colombo Academy changed its name to Royal College as it moved to the Colombo university premises Colombo 07 in 1913 and to the present location in 1917.
Boxing, the contact sport with colonial overtones was introduced to the school in 1913 by Donald Obeysekere, the father of Danton Obeysekera, a Cambridge university boxing Blue, without doubt the doyen of Boxing in Sri Lanka, who went on to coach boxers at Royal College for over 50 years and since then, Royal College has produced some reputed boxers.
Cricket is the oldest sport at Royal. Introduced in 1876 by Ashley Walker, a teacher in the school, who was a Cambridge cricket Blue. The first Royal Thomian cricket match was played in 1879.
The first Bradby Shield rugger encounter between Royal and Trinity College Kandy was in 1920. Rugger was also introduced to college about the same time boxing made its debut at Royal.
Last year marked Boxing’s 110th year of existence in the school.
The anniversary was held on Saturday the 9th of December 2023 at the Cavalry Officers’ Mess at the Sri Lanka Army Armoured Corps at Rock House Camp at Modera, Colombo 15.
The event was organized by the Royal College Boxing Advisory Council, whose chairman is former Army Commander General (Retd.) Jagath Jayasuriya. Gen. Jayasuriya’s guidance and leadership led to the 110th Anniversary celebrations becoming a reality, in the context that boxing at Royal has hit the doldrums in the recent past. The occasion was graced by the present Principal Mr. Thilak Wattuhewa, the senior Games Master and Assistant Principal Mr. Riyaz Aluher and the Master in charge of boxing Mr. T.M.R.N. Bandara.
A cute memento in the form of a porcelain mug, with the event inscribed was presented to all past boxers who attended the momentous occasion by the advisory committee.
Photographs were taken of all the past Captains present, those who represented the country in boxing and the unique photograph of boxers who had won the senior best boxers’ trophy, the T Y Wright challenge cup at the prestigious Stubbs Shield boxing championships and in this category the sole boxer to pose for the photograph with the principal was none other than General Jagath Jayasuriya, the college boxing captain in 1977, a unique singular achievement.
The Army band was in attendance and provided music to entertain the guests. A few cultural dance and song items were also performed to enthrall the audience. Many of us were surprised to learn that the army had so much aesthetic talent, both male and female.
The anniversary celebrations merits mention of some of our past outstanding boxing personalities, who stand out as glaring icons in Royal college boxing history. They were Danton Obeysekere, his father Donald Obeysekere, the founder of Boxing in college, Barney Henricus, Alex Obeysekere, Frederick Obeysekere, Eddie Gray, Metha Abeygunawardena, Rahula Silva, Saman Samaratunga, M.A. Jayalath, N.R. Tillekeratne, Jagath Jayasuriya, late Lt. Hisham Ousman, Aubrey Peiris, M. Nisthar and Abdulla Ibunu of a more contemporary era from 1970s onwards, to the present. Some of the above are no more as father time has snatched them away as the way of all living beings.
Present on this historic moment were old boy boxers from several past eras. As an act of appreciation and for fostering of boxing in their alma mater, the following were the attendees, to mark the historic occasion:
1960 – 1970: Commodore GES de Silva, Metha Abeygunawardena, Saman Samaratunga, KTP De Silva, MS Fernando,
1970 – 1980: Wazir Sourjah, Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya, YD Weerasooriya, M.A. Jayalath, Rohan Abeywardena, Nimal Jayasuriya, Shantha Kumara, Refai Buhary, Nalin Dayasagara, Rukmal Nanayakkara, DCL Ketagoda, Anura Uduwaraarchchi, Prasad Majeed, Sunanda Godawithana, Shamrath Fernando, T. Sopaka, Ajith Bopitiya,
1980-1990: Maj. Gen. Rajitha Ampemohotti, Sidath Tillakaratna, Allaam Ousman, Aubrey Peiris, Don Weerasinghe, Buddhima, Chandima Gunarathna, Herath Bandara, T.W. Herath, R.S. Kumarapperuma and Maj. R. Rajapakse.
1990 – 2000: Lakshman Amarasekera, Dhanushka Ekanayake, Muditha Cooray, Kanchana Ayantha, Sameera Deshapriya, Rasika Amarasinghe, Ranil Sanjeewa, Indika Kuruppuarchchi, Sumeda Perera and S.Manoharan.
2001 – 2010; Sanka Manamperi, Pivithuru Rathnayake, Danushka Weerakkody, Visitha Wijesekera, Chatura Kathriarachchi, Supun De Silva, Sampath Wijayanath, Sudara Suren, Charana Bandara, M. Nishthar, Champika Gunasekara, Asanka Kumarasiri, Niroshan Deddenigama, M.N. Omar, Buddika Prasasd, Dhanushka Wijekoon, Manamendra Badhraka, M. Wasim, Manijitha Fonseka and Amila Nakandala.
2011-2022: Ajith De Silva, Sanjeewa Wimalasena, Banuka Nayanajhith, Rasika Panditharathna, Nisal Sedawaththa, K Sindujan, Viswa Panapitiya, Uvindu Jayasinghe, Saiyaf Farouk and Madani Musthapha.
2023 Boxing team: U.S.M.Ahsan – present boxing captain, H.A.V. Perera, Ibunu Abdulla (Head coach), Esanda Bimsara and Rizwan Jamaldeen – coach.
The Boxing Advisory Committee under the leadership of Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya is planning to streamline the administration of boxing along with the collaboration of the Royal Boxing Club (RBC), by setting up guidelines and procedures and to familiarize, the student boxers and the boxing captain and the secretary and those senior boxers due to succeed in leadership roles in the future. In this, the areas of keeping proper records of the boxers, their achievements, the challenge trophies in the custody of the school and the conduct of the annual inter house boxing meet for the Obeysekere shield. These initiatives will give the student boxers in the school practical organizational and administrative exposure, in addition to learning boxing skills. The boxing advisory committee is also planning a much-needed fund raiser to augment financial obligations to improve the sport in the school by holding a musical show, a Singalong by Chandimal, the “Tribute to Legends” on Sunday the 3rd of March 2024 at the Bishops College auditorium. The advisory committee is hopeful that the sports fraternity of Royal College, the boxing fraternity in Sri Lanka and well-wishers would rise to the occasion to make the event a success.
Wazir Sourjah
Royal College Boxing Captain – 1973
Latest News
Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar lead rout of Delhi Capitals
On Saturday, Delhi served up a belter of a pitch on which 265 played 264. Two days later, the adjacent surface produced a passage of play straight out of a spicy Test-match session. Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Josh Hazlewood maximised the swing and bounce on offer in the early exchanges to raze through Delhi Capitals. DC crumpled to 8 for 6 – their powerplay score of 13 was the lowest in a full IPL game – and were in danger of being dismissed for the lowest total in the league.
Contributions from the lower order helped them avoid that ignominy and dragged them to 75. Royal Challengers Bengaluru completed the demolition job with nine wickets and 81 balls to spare. They narrowed Punjab Kings’ lead at the top of the table to just one point and boosted their NRR.
The carnage began with Bhuvneshwar yorking IPL debutant Sahil Parakh for a two-ball duck in the first over and ended with DC being decimated for the lowest powerplay score.
The Delhi pitch didn’t misbehave, but offered swing and bounce throughout the powerplay. Bhuvneshwar and Hazlewood made the most of it to return figures of 3-0-5-3 and 3-0-8-3 respectively in the first six overs. At the innings break, Bhuvneshwar said that he was surprised that the ball swung for so long. Safe to say so were the DC batters.
Parakh, picked ahead of Prithvi Shaw, came in as a player with considerable reputation for an 18-year old. DC’s director of cricket Venugopal Rao believes he can play for India one day, but on Monday, his IPL debut lasted all of two balls. Bhuvneshwar hit his edge first ball with an outswinger and knocked out his middle stump with an inswinger next ball.
In the second over, Hazlewood hit the perfect length – neither short or full – with his first ball to KL Rahul and had him top-edging a pull to the wicketkeeper Jitesh Sharma. Hazlewood pushed his length and line fuller and wider next ball and found late away movement to have Sameer Rizvi nicking to Jitesh for a golden duck.
Tristan Stubbs denied Hazlewood a hat-trick, but in the next over he too edged behind, off Bhuvneshwar. With two slips in play, including a wide one, Rajat Patidar ramped up the pressure on DC and empowered his bowlers to keep attacking. When Bhuvneshwar also kissed Axar Patel’s edge, DC were 7 for 5 in the third over.
It soon became 8 for 6 when Hazlewood dug a snorter into Nitish Rana’s arm pit from around the wicket. Rana took his eyes off the ball and ended up fending it to Padikkal.
Even RCB couldn’t believe what had just transpired. Tim David covered his face in disbelief.
A dust storm, which caused a brief stoppage, and a 35-run partnership for the seventh wicket between Abhishek Porel and David Miller then gave DC some respite.
DC had pressed the emergency switch and brought Porel in as an Impact Player following the fall of the fifth wicket. The first shot of authority came from Porel when he swatted Rasikh Dar over midwicket for four soon after the powerplay.
Miller also seemed fairly comfortable against RCB’s change bowlers before Rasikh drew a top edge with a short ball that stopped on the batter. Batting at No.8 for the first time in his 565-match T20 career, Miller was dismissed for 19 off 18 balls.
Kyle Jamieson hit the first six of the game when he launched Romario Shepherd over square leg in the 11th over, but two overs later, Krunal Pandya pinned him lbw for 12 off 13 balls.
Porel hung around for 33 balls for 30 runs before he was the last man dismissed. He was also the only DC batter to pass 20 and took them past the lowest IPL total of 49. Hazlewood made a mess of his stumps with a searing yorker that tailed in from around the wicket.
Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 77 for 1 in 6.3 overs (Jacob Bethell 20, Virat Kohli 23*, Devdutt Padikkal 34*; Kyle Jamieson 1-42) beat Delhi Capitals 75 in 16.3 overs (AbishekPorel 30, David Miller 19, Kyle Jamieson 12; Josh Hazlewood 4-12, Bhuvneshwar Kumar 3-05, RasikhnSalman 1-21, Suyashb Sharma 1-07, Krunal Pandya 1-09) by nine wickets
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Quality of ‘A’ team cricketers impress coach Priyanjan
Sri Lanka ‘A’ signed off a near-flawless campaign this week, outplaying New Zealand ‘A’ with the assurance of a side batting on a different pitch. The islanders not only completed a 3-0 whitewash in the limited-overs leg, but also sealed the unofficial Test series 1-0, wrapping up the second game in Galle by an innings before lunch on day four, a result that underlined skill and depth.
It was Ashan Priyanjan’s first assignment as Head Coach of Sri Lanka ‘A’, and the former international came away convinced that several players are no longer knocking politely but banging the door down for national honours.
“There are several of them who stood up when the chips were down,” Priyanjan told The Island. “I feel each one of them is ready to step up to the senior side and deliver.”
Sri Lanka ‘A’ were made to earn their stripes. Throughout the one-day series, they found themselves in tight corners but refused to throw in the towel. Even with the series in the bag, there was no easing off the accelerator. In the third ODI, a dead rubber on paper, they chased down 303 with more than three overs to spare.
The second game had already set the tone. A muscular 368 for nine was posted, with several young batsmen cashing in once they got their eye in, showing the kind of appetite selectors crave.
“Our plan was simple, keep churning out 300-plus totals,” Priyanjan said. “The Powerplay wasn’t our issue. It was the middle overs, between the 11th and 40th, where we had been losing momentum. We addressed that and the results followed.”
Flat decks offered value for shots, but they also demanded sharper thinking from the bowlers, a test Priyanjan believes his attack passed with distinction.
“When you play on good batting surfaces, bowlers have to go back to the drawing board,” he noted. “It was a proper workout, a learning curve and a necessary one.”
The red-ball leg provided its own narrative arc. After the opening unofficial Test in Suriyawewa petered out into a draw, Sri Lanka ‘A’ hit back hard in Galle. Top-order batter Kamil Mishara compiled a fluent 174 at better than a run a ball, while left-arm spinner Dilum Sudeera ran through the visitors with a ten-wicket match bag, a performance that turned the game on its head.
“Our bowlers learned the art of containment in Suriyawewa when the opposition got on top,” Priyanjan said. “That experience helped them in Galle. And it’s encouraging to see batters hungry for big hundreds, that’s the currency at the highest level.”
Fielding, often the poor cousin in development squads, was another box ticked emphatically. Priyanjan was quick to credit improved fitness levels for sharper work in the ring and on the boundary.
“Our fitness standards were high, and that reflected in the fielding,” he said. “The players have put in the hard yards, full credit to them.”
With India ‘A’ due in Sri Lanka in June before a tour of Ireland, the nation’s young cricketers have been kept busy.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Shammi Silva set to walk, SLC braced for shake-up
Sri Lanka Cricket is set for yet another changing of the guard, with long-serving president Shammi Silva expected to step down on Wednesday, clearing the decks for an interim administration to take charge of the game’s affairs.
Silva, a heavyweight in cricket’s corridors of power, has been part of SLC’s fabric since 2017, including a seven-year stint at the top. But after weathering a few storms, the veteran administrator appears ready to declare his innings.
A former multi-sport athlete at Nalanda College who later turned out for Colombo Cricket Club, where he now serves as President, Silva rose through the ranks to occupy the game’s most powerful seat locally, often elected unopposed. Yet, in recent years, the tide has turned.
Pressure has been mounting since Sri Lanka’s underwhelming campaign at the 2023 World Cup in India, when critics sharpened their knives. Matters came to a head when then Sports Minister Roshan Ranasinghe removed Shammi Silva and installed an interim committee, only for the move to backfire spectacularly.
The International Cricket Council promptly suspended Sri Lanka for political interference, a bouncer the government failed to sway, forcing a hasty reinstatement of Shammi Silva.
The latest wave of discontent followed Sri Lanka’s failure to reach the semi-finals of the recent T20 World Cup, co-hosted with India, a campaign that left fans and stakeholders alike questioning the direction of the game.
Sources indicate that current government officials have since met Shammi Silva, laying out the mood on the street. In those discussions, he is understood to have agreed to step aside. After chairing Tuesday’s Executive Committee meeting, he is expected to call time on his tenure the following morning.
His committee may well follow suit. Insiders suggest a clean sweep is on the cards, with an interim body likely to be appointed to steady the ship until fresh elections are held.
Among the frontrunners to take over are Eran Wickramaratne, a former cricketer turned opposition politician and Suresh Subramaniam, the former head of the National Olympic Committee. A clutch of respected former players including Sidath Wettimuny, Kushil Gunasekara and Roshan Mahanama are also expected to be part of the new set-up.
The incoming administration is tipped to fast-track governance reforms, including the adoption of a new constitution based on recommendations by Justice Chithrasiri. The blueprint, long in the making, aims to bring transparency and professionalism, mixing cricketing expertise with specialists in finance, law and administration.
The push for reform gained momentum when several leading figures, including spin legend Muttiah Muralitharan, took legal recourse in a bid to clean up the system. The retired judge’s report is seen as a roadmap to drag SLC out of troubled waters and into calmer seas. (www.telecomasia.net)
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