Connect with us

Sports

Why give Pathum the cold shoulder?

Published

on

Pathum Nissanka has had a brilliant start to his Test career but he’s been given the cold shoulder in the longer format of the game.

by Rex Clementine

At times you wonder whether the reason for our cricket to suffer setbacks is lack of talent or poor man management. Take the case of Pathum Nissanka. He scores a Test hundred on debut, that too overseas and has notched up five more half-centuries in nine Tests and then was sidelined fearing a back injury might flare up. Even when he has regained full fitness, he has failed to find a place in the side.

When Mahela Jayawardene was Sri Lanka’s captain, he had an interesting theory. If a player had gone out of the side due to injury, when he returned, he could regain his place automatically although his replacement had done quite well. MJ, brilliant brain he is, but his theories aren’t always consistent.

Marvan Atapattu, MJ’s predecessor had gone out of the side with injury and when he returned not only was the captaincy snatched away from him, but he was even made to be the waterboy during the entire 2007 World Cup. In MJ, beneath the softspoken gent, lies a ruthless mastermind.If Marvan, from the cricketing royalty of Ananda and SSC, can suffer such a fate, Pathum Nissanka, from the rural Kalutara, is a nobody.

Rather than being stubborn, Pathum should do a Kusal Mendis – switch to SSC and you’ll get your dues. Since his shift to SSC, Kusal has had a suspension reduced, given the vice-captaincy of the ODI team and has become undroppable across all three formats.

It’s true that NCC looked after Pathum during his days of struggle. But the trend in modern society is to kick the ladder that helped you go places. Pathum can learn a few things from Kusal. There’s no point in blaming MJ for the selectors’ actions, some may argue. The selectors – with all respect to Rumesh Kaluwitharana – are mere puppets on a string. MJ is the alpha and omega of cricket.

Asitha Fernando, who missed the first Test as he was recovering from dengue has been added to the squad and he is expected to feature in today’s second Test. His absence was felt in Galle as Asitha is an expert of bowling with the older ball.

SSC is hosting a Test match for the first time since 2018.Head Coach Chris Silverwood expected imprvements in all three departments from his team after the four wicket loss in Galle.

“I have pushed them harder during training. There are certain areas we need to improve on and fielding is one of that. If you analyze the last Test we fell short in all three departments and that’s a concern,” Silverwood said.

Pakistan Head Coach Grant Bradburn spoke about his team’s dream of becoming world’s number one ranked side. “We want to keep improving our skills. We are growing all the time. We want to be number one in the world and to do that we want to have players in the top ten ranks for bowlers and batters. We are very happy with the way we played in Galle. Now that chapter is over. This venue is a different examination.”

Sri Lanka (From)

Dimuth Karunaratne (Captain), Nishan Madushka, Kusal Mendis, Angelo Mathews, Dinesh Chandimal, Dhananjaya de Silva, Sadeera Samarawickrama (wicketkeeper), Ramesh Mendis, Prabath Jayasuriya, Kasun Rajitha, Vishwa Fernando, Kamindu Mendis, Pathum Nissanka, Praveen Jayawickrama, Dilshan Madushanka, Lakshitha Manasinghe and Asitha Fernando.

Pakistan (From)

Babar Azam (Captain), Mohammad Rizwan (wicketkeeper), Aamer Jamal, Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Hasan Ali, Imam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Hurraira, Mohammad Nawaz, Naseem Shah, Noman Ali, Agha Salman, Sarfaraz Ahmed (wicketkeeper), Saud Shakeel, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Shan Masood.

Umpires: Alex Wharf (Eng) and Chris Gaffaney (NZ)

Television Umpire : Rod Tucker (Aus)

Match Referee: David Boon (Aus)



Latest News

ICC Board meetings in Doha called off due to West Asia conflict

Published

on

By

Some ICC meetings will take place virtually over the next few weeks [Cricinfo]

The ICC Board and committee meetings scheduled for later this month in Doha have been called off due to the ongoing military conflict in West Asia. ESPNcricinfo understands that specific meetings, particularly those pertaining to the finance committee will take place virtually over the next few weeks. The possibility of in-person meetings in April remains open but much will depend on whether airspace has sufficiently re-opened for the board and committee members to fly safely.

The meetings were originally scheduled for March 25 to 27 and were due to include ICC Board Directors, Chief Executives, Committee members and ICC senior leadership. Three of the key issues up for discussion were global broadcasting rights ,with the deal between the ICC and *JioStar set to end in 2027, initial discussions over the next FTP and Olympic qualification for LA 2028. The second of those have already begun informally with several members approaching others as they make plans for cricket’s next four-year calendar.

This was the first time the ICC was due to meet in Qatar, which reports a cricketing participation growth rate of 447%. With limited flights to and from the country, hosting the meetings was deemed impossible at this time.

The crisis in West Asia has had an impact on scheduling too. The white-ball series between Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, scheduled to be held in the UAE from March 13 to 25, is likely to be postponed indefinitely.

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Sports

India hammer New Zealand to retain T20 World Cup crown

Published

on

Defending champions India retained the T20 World Cup with a clinical performance over New Zealand in the final in Ahmedabad.

India produced a ruthless, near-flawless performance to retain the T20 World Cup title they won in the Caribbean two years ago, steamrolling New Zealand by 96 runs in Sunday’s final in Ahmedabad.

The Kiwis, who had marched into the final after ending South Africa’s unbeaten run in the Calcutta semi-final, ran into a blue wall. India piled up a daunting 255 for five after being asked to bat and then bundled New Zealand out for 159 with an over to spare, sealing one of the most emphatic wins in a World Cup final.

India had been given a wake-up call earlier in the tournament when South Africa handed them a heavy defeat in the Super Eight stage, leaving them needing four straight wins to lift the trophy. From that point on, Surya Kumar Yadav’s men put their foot on the accelerator and never looked back, playing like a side on a mission and delivering the knockout punch when it mattered most.

It was a triumph built not just on star power but on depth and system. India’s conveyor belt of talent keeps churning out match-winners, and their bench strength is the envy of the cricketing world. You may grumble about their strong-arm tactics in the corridors of power, but there is no denying the machine they have built. The result is domination across formats – men’s, women’s and Under-19 – echoing the era of Australian supremacy. At the moment, India are the team everyone else is chasing.

The victory was India’s biggest in T20 World Cup history and made them the first team to win the title three times. Former captains Rohit Sharma, who led the side to the 2024 crown and M.S. Dhoni, the architect of the inaugural triumph in 2007, were present at the venue to witness another chapter of Indian cricketing glory.

New Zealand, however, got their sums wrong. Their seamers stuck to predictable pace and failed to mix things up, allowing India’s openers to cash in during the powerplay.

Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson came out all guns blazing, racing to 98 for the first wicket in just 7.1 overs and putting the Kiwis immediately on the back foot. Abhishek set the tone with a blistering 52 off 22 balls, while Samson anchored the charge with a sparkling 89 off 46 deliveries, peppered with five fours and eight towering sixes.

Samson had been India’s banker throughout the tournament, striking three consecutive half-centuries during the campaign and walking away with the Player of the Series award.

The fireworks did not stop there. Ishan Kishan chipped in with a breezy 54 off 25 balls at number three as India threatened to push past the 270 mark. New Zealand managed to drag things back slightly at the death, but chasing 256 in a World Cup final was always going to be a bridge too far.

India’s bowlers then applied the squeeze. Jasprit Bumrah led the charge with a masterclass in fast bowling, finishing with figures of four for 15 and walking away with the Man of the Match award as New Zealand’s chase fizzled out quickly.

Rex Clementine in Ahmedabad

Continue Reading

Sports

Chamuditha shines with all-round brilliance as St. Servatius’ beat Lumbini

Published

on

Viran Chamuditha produced impressive all-round performances to lead St. Servatius' to victory. (File Pic)

Sri Lanka Under-19 player Viran Chamuditha produced a superb all-round performance to power St. Servatius’ College Matara to a convincing innings and 55-run victory over Lumbini College in their Under-19 Division I Tier ‘A’ cricket tournament match played at the BRC Ground on Monday.

‎Chamuditha, who had earlier dazzled with the bat, went on to claim a match haul of ten wickets to seal an emphatic win for the Matara school.

‎After being forced to follow on when they were dismissed for 112 runs in their first innings, Lumbini showed some resistance in the second innings. Pasindu Maheesha, Linoth Methmal and Jayanitha Mendis offered brief fightbacks as they batted for nearly 50 overs, but the side was eventually bowled out for 183 runs.

‎Chamuditha led the bowling attack with a fine five wicket hal for 48 runs, sharing eight wickets in the innings with Lasindu Ramanayake. The pair had also been the main wicket takers in the first innings as St. Servatius’ dominated with the ball.

‎The foundation for the comprehensive victory had earlier been laid by the Servatius’ top order who piled up an imposing 350 for six wickets in 50 overs.

‎Heshan Madushanka top-scored with a fluent 128 runs off 147 deliveries, an innings studded with 16 boundaries and a six. Opener Risinu Kithmuka provided early impetus with a brisk 64 off 47 balls.

‎Chamuditha then capped the innings with a blistering knock of 83 runs off just 31 balls, smashing eight fours and six sixes. The explosive innings came after the young all-rounder had broken batting records at the ICC Youth World Cup, further underlining his immense potential.

‎With both bat and ball, Chamuditha’s outstanding display ensured St. Servatius’ completed a dominant victory.

Continue Reading

Trending