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Kusals fire Dambulla to LPL final

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Kusal Perera smashed a half-century to help Dambulla Aura to the finals of the Lanka Premier League as they beat Galle Titans in the Qualifier 1 yesterday at RPS.

The aura surrounding Jaffna Kings in the Lanka Premier League has slipped and the team with the new winning formula is Dambulla Aura, who did so well during the league stage of the tournament to top the group. They continued their impressive run in the first Qualifier knocking off Galle Titians yesterday at RPS to book a berth in the finals.

Dambulla Aura have got both the fire power in top of the order and batters who could consolidate and a run chase of 147 proved to be not much of a challenge as they reached home with six wickets and two deliveries to spare.

The two Kusals – Perera and Mendis – were the architects of Dambulla’s win with contrasting innings. Captain Mendis cut down the loose strokes and concentrated at the job at hand while Perera cut loose punishing the bad balls.

Galle’s spin trio had created havoc in their last league game against Colombo Strikers, but Perera and Mendis brought in their experience to keep the spinners in check after the quicks had failed to provide early breakthroughs.

The early fire work was provided by Avishka Fernando, who smashed 24 off 14 balls with one four and three sixes.

Mendis steadied the innings and was unfortunate to miss out on a well deserved half-century as he was ruled out leg before wicket after Galle Titans successfully reviewed and overturned a decision. Mendis scored 49 off 45 balls with six fours.

Perera, meanwhile, put out a show, smashing 53 off 39 balls with four fours and three sixes. He was dismissed in the last over with scores levelled.All hope is not lost for Galle Titans though as they will play the winners of the Eliminator on Saturday.

Galle’s total of 146 was largely due to the efforts of their young opening batsman Lasith Croospulle.The former Maris Stella College cricketer smashed 80 off 61 balls with seven fours before being dismissed in the penultimate ball of the innings. There was little support for Croospulle as the next best score in the Galle innings was Shakib-al-Hasan’s 19.

Had Galle managed to score something in the range of 160, given their bowling attack, this could have been a tight game.Hayden Kerr with three wickets and Noor Ahmed with two wickets impressed for Dambulla.

Brief Scores:

Galle Titans 146 all out (20)

(Lasith Croospulle 80, Shakib-Al-Hasan 19, Hayden Kerr 3-18, Noor Ahmed 2-27)

Dambulla Aura 147-4 (19.4)

(Avishka Fernando 24, Kusal Mendis 49, Kusal Perera 53, Seekkuge Prasanna 1-22)

Result: Dambulla Aura won by six wickets



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Wellalage thrives after being thrown into the deep end

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Dunith Wellalage.

In a campaign where Sri Lanka have been forced to reshuffle their deck more often than they would have liked, Dunith Wellalage has found himself tossed the new ball during the Power Play and the young all-rounder has swum rather than sunk.

With Matheesha Pathirana, Wanindu Hasaranga and Eshan Malinga all ruled out by injury during the 20-nation showpiece, the former champions have had to plug gaps on the run. Wellalage, who may well have been watching from the sidelines had the cupboard been full, has instead been handed a front-row seat and he has made it count.

“It was a challenge bowling during the Power Plays and the key was for me to deny the batsmen boundaries,” Wellalage told reporters on the eve of Sri Lanka’s crunch Super Eight clash against New Zealand at the R. Premadasa Stadium. “I had to be clever with my lengths and when I did that the batters had to take a few chances. I relished the new challenge.”

Called upon to operate inside the first six overs against England when field restrictions were on, a phase usually reserved for the more experienced bowlers, the left-arm spinner rolled his arm over with maturity beyond his 23 years. He finished with three wickets, varying his pace and length like a seasoned campaigner.

With seven scalps from five outings, Wellalage is Sri Lanka’s second highest wicket-taker in the tournament behind Maheesh Theekshana’s eight. Not bad for a man who began the competition as a supporting act.

But it is not just with the ball that the former Under-19 captain has been asked to come forward. Sri Lanka’s think tank has nudged him up the batting order, promoting him from his usual berth at seven or eight, a move that has drawn praise from Batting Coach Vikram Rathour.

“I usually bat at number seven or eight, but I have been told to be ready to go up at number five if the situation arises,” Wellalage explained. “My role is to get some quick runs. The coaches have been very supportive and I enjoy the challenge.”

It is a role that demands clear thinking and brave stroke-play, the art of finding gaps rather than swinging blindly for the ropes. In a side that has at times been guilty of losing wickets in clusters, Wellalage’s calm head has offered stability.

Wednesday’s contest in Colombo is a must-win for Sri Lanka, who were handed a sobering 51-run defeat by England in their Super Eight opener. Another slip and the equation becomes steep; win, and the semi-final dream remains alive.

“We have got to now win both these games,” Wellalage said. “We have played New Zealand a lot in recent years and we know that we can beat them in these conditions. We are still in with a chance to make it to the semis and winning tomorrow will be important.”

Sri Lanka’s struggles in global tournaments since lifting the T20 crown in 2014 have been well documented. They have had to navigate qualifying routes and even missed out on the 2024 Champions Trophy, the first Men’s ICC event they failed to feature in since making their World Cup debut in 1975.

Yet Wellalage believes the tide is slowly turning.

“We know how important a home World Cup is. The fans have turned up in numbers and we have always believed that we can make it to the semi-finals,” he said. “The last two games haven’t gone to our plan but we are looking forward to the must-win clash tomorrow.”

Sri Lanka boast a healthy record at the RPS, where the surface often demands application over audacity. It is not a venue for reckless slogging but for bowlers who hit their straps and batters willing to graft before they unfurl.

“We have a good record at this ground and our winning percentage here has been good. All players are looking forward to doing well tomorrow,” Wellalage added.

by Rex Clementine

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Afghanistan to host Sri Lanka for white-ball series in March in the UAE

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The two teams haven't met in internationals since the Asia Cup in September last year

Afghanistan will host Sri Lanka for the first time in March for a multi-format white-ball series, with three ODIs and three T20Is to be played in the UAE from March 13 to 25.

The T20I leg of the tour will be played in Sharjah on March 13, 15 and 17. The ODI leg will be played in Dubai on March 20, 22 and 25.

The T20I series will start just five days after the T20 World Cup ends on March 8. The ODI series will end just one day before both the IPL and PSL get underway on March 26. Players from both countries – Dasun Shanaka, Rashid Khan, Kusal Perera and Noor Ahmad, among others – are in various squads across the two franchise competitions.

This will be only the second bilateral T20I series between the two teams. The first time was in February 2024.

In ODIs, this will be the fourth bilateral series between Afghanistan and Sri Lanka after previous meetings in 2022, 2023 and 2024. (Cricinfo)

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Thomians collapse after second wicket stand

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Kanilka Anthony (5/66) and Dinal Fernando bowled the bulk of the overs and shared eight wickets between them as Trinity restricted S. Thomas’ to 189 runs on day one of the Ranil Abeynayake Memorial Trophy cricket encounter at the BRC ground on Tuesday.

‎Trinity are the hosts of this match which is also a Division I Tier ‘A’ tournament encounter.

‎With the Anthony-Fernando pair threatening to bundle out the visitors for a low score, number nine batsman Shanil Perera dropped anchor with an unbeaten 37 for them to post their eventual total.

‎In reply,Trinity were 54 for one wicket at close.

‎Batting first Jayden Amaraweera and Aaron Kodithuwakku put on a stand of 85 runs for the second wicket but rest of the batsmen failed to capitalize on the patiently put on base.

‎The Thomians got off to a bad start after open bat Yevan Gunathilake was out for five runs with just eight runs on the board . But there were no further wickets in the morning as the second wicket pair batted for 35 overs together.

‎Amaraweera made 50 in 115 balls and Aaron’s 72 came in 181 balls.

‎Scores:

‎S. Thomas’ 189 all out in 77.4 overs

‎(Aaron Kodituwakku 72, Jaden Amaraweera 50, Shanil Perera 37n.o.,

‎Kanika Anthony 5/66, Dinal Fernando 3/34)

‎Trinity 54 for 1 in 16 overs

(Pulisha Thilakarathne 25n.o.) (RF)

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