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Dimuth’s inimitable captaincy style

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Dimuth Karunaratne will step down from captaincy after the home series against Ireland.

by Rex Clementine

Having built up a reputation for himself as a quiet achiever, Dimuth Karunaratne didn’t surprise many when he indicated that he’ll step down from captaincy after the two match home series against Ireland soon after the Sinhala – Tamil New Year.

Dimuth has reasoned that he wanted a new leader at the helm for the next cycle of the ICC Test Championship rather than vacating the post half way through the campaign. That sounds very sensible and thoughts of an unselfish captain.

Given the catastrophe that Sri Lankan cricket has gone through in the last five years, forced to play qualifying round tournaments in white ball cricket and instability in captaincy, Dimuth has done so well having occupied the Test captaincy for more than four years now. Not many Sri Lankan skippers age well like Dimuth.

There was this fast bowler who was desperate to get the captaincy but once at the helm he failed to do a decent job and had to be kicked out eventually.

Dimuth was appointed in 2019 amidst lot of gloom. Sri Lanka had been thrashed 2-0 in Australia and from Canberra the team was flying straight to South Africa. Dinesh Chandimal had been axed as skipper and Dimuth had to accept the role reluctantly. He had spent a night in a Canberra hospital prior to that after being peppered by a barrage of short pitched bowling.

Regrouping the team wasn’t easy. The side was without some of their seniors and was coming back after a series of suspensions for the team management and the captain for the ball tampering fiasco in the Caribbean.

Sri Lankan cricket had become the laughing stock at the world stage and Dimuth had to rebuild the reputation. His style was quite different from other Sri Lankan captains. He gave the players freedom, a lot of it sometimes. He felt that too many restrictions didn’t bring the best out of players and believed the best way forward was by allowing players to be independent. His methods worked as Sri Lanka stunned South Africa by winning the series. It was a historic win as Sri Lanka became the first Asian team to win a series in South Africa. In fact, apart from Australia and England no other team had won a series in South Africa. It was quite an achievement given the low ebb Sri Lankan team was at that point.

In fact, while the national cricket team struggled to come out of their struggles in white ball cricket, the Test team under Dimuth did fairly well managing wins over top nations and their captain was leading from front scoring big runs both home and away.

Dimuth had done so well that lead up to this last series against New Zealand, Sri Lanka had a chance to qualify for the finals of the World Test Championship. He ends up with ten Test wins in 26 matches and only four other Sri Lankan captains have won more Tests than him – Sanath Jayasuriya, Mahela Jayawardene, Arjuna Ranatunga and Angelo Mathews. Incidentally, all four of them have also lost more Tests than Dimuth’s ten.

Dimuth was an honest man. He wasn’t the most aggressive guy but that doesn’t mean that he didn’t take up the grievances of his players. At times he was given a raw deal but he always carried himself well, never bitter and never a bad word for a mate, selector or an official.

Dhananjaya de Silva looks to be his natural successor, but what we feel matters little in Sri Lankan cricket.



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De Klerk comes clutch as RCB steal last-ball thriller against Mumbai Indians

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Nadine de Klerk showed off her finishing prowess on RCB debut ( BCCI)

Nadine de Klerk’s sensational late onslaught, eerily reminiscent of the heist that turned the tables on India at the 2025 ODI World Cup, catapulted RCB to a sensational opening-night win over defending champions Mumbai Indians at the DY Patil Stadium.

That de Klerk pulled it off without Smriti Mandhana, Grace Harris or Richa Ghosh – all gone inside eight overs with RCB still needing 90 – made it even more sensational.

Needing 18 off the final over, de Klerk played out two dot balls, before going 6,4,6 to bring the equation down to 2 off 1. Then with the field in to save the single, she backed away to drill Nat Sciver-Brunt back over the bowler to clinch an improbable win.

De Klerk finished 63 not out along with her 4 for 26 to deliver an MVP performance that left the opponents shell shocked. Harmanpreet Kaur could only muster a wry smile that conveyed more than words could. For her, it was deja vu all over again.

MI could have killed the game at the start of the 19th over with RCB needing 29. Sciver-Brunt putting down a straightforward chance at long-off first ball. Off the fourth, MI missed two opportunities – Amelia Kerr spilled de Klerk’s miscued swipe at deep square, and G Kamal8ni  failed to gather the return cleanly for a run out as de Klerk tried to scramble back for a second.

Amid the chaos, Prema Rawat, not called upon to bowl a single over of legspin, still found a way to contribute, walloping two priceless boundaries, including one in the penultimate over, to finish 8 not out.

She couldn’t lay bat on ball earlier in the game, but Kerr’s wickets of Radha Yadav and the dangerous Richa Ghosh in quick succession left RCB – playing a batter short – gasping at 65 for 5 in the eighth over. RCB’s fiery start – they hit seven fours and a six in the first three overs alone – courtesy Grace Harris and Smriti Mandhana, was suddenly being undone. It needed a 52-run partnership from de Klerk and Arundhati Reddy – who made 20 off 25 – to bring RCB’s chase back within the realms of possibility, before de Klerk cut loose.

Lauren Bell set the tone early with a spell of high-class swing bowling. Kerr, opening in Hayley Matthews’ absence due to an illness, was beaten eight times in her first ten deliveries as she failed to combat Bell’s late outswing. She finally scraped off the mark only off her 11th ball.

Bell was trusted with a third over in the powerplay and she finished the job by sending back Kerr with a hard-length delivery she sliced to cover, making 4 off 15. Bell’s figures of 4-1-14-1 underlined just how much she had suffocated MI.

Kamalini briefly dazzled, as did Harmanpreet. If the short-arm jab in front of square off Bell was a teaser, the lofted inside-out hit over extra cover off Shreyanka Patil was blockbuster. The signs were ominous, but a hack off de Klerk saw Harmanpreet nick one to Richa Ghosh to leave MI 67 for 4 in 11 overs.

Promoted ahead of the more accomplished Amanjot Kaur, Sajana survived two chances in as many overs – first by D Hemalatha at midwicket, then by substitute Sayali Satghare at mid-off. At the other end, the pressure was mounting on debutant Nicola Carey, who limped to 14 off 14. MI needed to flick a switch, and Sajana did.

Radha’s left-arm spin was taken for 15 in the 15th over. Then, she clinically took down de Klerk when she returned for her third by using long levers and brute force to muscle big hits in the arc between long-on and deep midwicket for three fours. Overs 14-17 fetched MI 41, and they were back on the move.

Between them, Carey, all timing, and Sajana, gloriously agricultural, contributed 85 to ensure MI would make a match of it, which they did, only to be pipped at the finish line.

Brief scores:

Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women 157 for 7 in 20 overs (Nadine de Klerk 63*, Arundhati Reddy 20; Nat Sciver-Brunt 1-47, Shabnim Ismail 1-26, N8cola Carey 2-35, Amanjot Kaur 1-18. Amelia Kerr 2-13) beat Mumbai Indians Women 154 for 6 in 20 overs (Gunalan Kamalini 32, Harmanpreet Kaur 20, Sajeevan Sajana 45, Nicola Carey 40; Lauren Bell1-14, Nad8ne de Klerk 4-26, Shreyanka Patil 1-32) by three wickets

(Cricinfo)

 

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Thomians post 292 runs

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Under 19 Cricket

Half centuries by Ludeesha Matarage and Reshon Soloman and useful contributions from top order batsmen helped S. Thomas’ post 292 runs against Wesley in the Under 19 traditional cricket encounter at Mount Lavinia on Friday.

‎At Reid Avenue Rehan Peiris top scored with 82 runs as Royal scored 265 runs against St. Joseph’s on day one in their traditional match.

‎Ananda did well to restrict St. Anthony’s Katugastota to 163 runs but the home team lost two quick wickets for 16 runs in their response at Ananda Mawatha.

‎‎Scores

Thomians post 292 against Wesley

at Mount Lavinia

Scores

‎S. Thomas’ 292 in 79.6 overs

(Jayden Amaraweera 39, Ludeesha Matarage 73, Aaron Kodituwakku 28, Reshon Soloman 56, Shanil Perera 33; Rashmika Amararatne 4/58, Rasheed Nahyan 2/54, Methnula Mayadunna 2/46)

Wesley 28 for 1 in 13 overs

‎‎Royal 265, Joes 35/0 at Reid Avenue

‎‎Scores

‎Royal 265 all out in 78 overs

(Hirun Liyanarachchi 28, Rehan Peiris 82, Yasindu Dissanayake 24, Manuth Dasanayaka 25, Shehandu Sooriyaarachchi 20n.o.; Nushan Perera 3/100, Vishwa Peiris 5/60)

‎St. Joseph’s 35 for no loss in 12.2 overs

(Aveesha Samash 27n.o.)

‎St. Anthony’s restricted to 163 runs at Ananda Mawatha

Scores

‎St. Anthony’s 163 all out in 68.2 overs

(Praveen Gamage 21, Dinul Wijesinghe 65n.o., Ryan Gregory 21; Pasan Batugahage 2/22, Kithma Widanapathirana 3/58, Sharada Jayarathna 3/29)

‎Ananda 16 for 2 in 8 overs

Division I Tier B Cricket

‎‎Moratu MV on first inning, St. Anne’s

better in second innings at Moratuwa

Scores

‎Moratu MV 288 all out in 77.4 overs (Deneth Sithumina 54, Sanjana Senevirathne 111, Menuka Kothalawala 39n.o.; Sanuja Dissanayake 5/85, Yashmith Jayasundara 2/28, Nesad Weerasekara 2/93)

St. Anne’s 57 for 4 overnight 139 all out in 32.5 overs (Ishan Khan 28, Kushan Subasinghe 50n.o., ; Menuka Kothalawala 4/54, Vihanga Nethsara 3/27, Nipuna Sithum 2/34) and 300 for 8 decl. in 74 overs (Sanuka Kemsara 57, Methviru Abeysekara 30, Kushan Subasinghe 54, Yashmith Jayasundara 58, Sanuja Dissanayake 43; Sasindu Peiris 3/55, Sanjana Seneviratne 2/46, Sudharshana Suwaris 3/79)

‎‎St. Sebastians’ on first innings win at Katuneriya

‎‎Scores

‎St. Sebastians’ 145 all out in 35.1 overs (Dinindu Dilan 48, Maheesha Sithum 25; Thrindu Naveen 2/39, Menula Dambakumbura 5/40, Dimuthu Tharuka 2/13) and 130 all out in 46.2 overs (Maheesha Sithum 76; Menula Dambakumbura 7/55, Dasith Senal 3/49)

Isipatana 81 for 6 overnight 143 all out in 49.2 overs (Dewshan Deneth 26, Dasith Senal 20, Tharindu Naveen 24; Maheesha Sithum 3/48, Sachintha Sandeep 2/38, Damsith Subashan 2/28, Tharuka Manaram 2/11) and 83 for 7 in 28 overs (Maleesha Sandaruwan 26; Tharuka Manaram 2/27, Damsith Subashana 2/05) (RF)

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Rain washes out 2nd T20I in Dambulla

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The second T20I between Sri Lanka and Pakistan which was to be played at Dambulla was abandoned without a ball being bowled due to rain.

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