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Kusal Mendis has turned a corner

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Kusal Mendis

by Rex Clementine

We are very quick to learn from the big brother. Sri Lanka’s first game of this ICC Cricket World Cup in Delhi was played at Arun Jaitley Stadium, named after their former Finance Minister. Sri Lanka’s last game was played in Hyderabad at Rajiv Gandhi Stadium while their next game in Lucknow will be played at Athal Bihari Vajpayee Stadium, both Prime Ministers of India. The final of the World Cup of course will be played in Ahmedabad at Narendra Modi Stadium, the current PM.

MCG was boasting all this while that they could host 110,000 fans for a game. But now Ahmedabad can host 138,000 fans and it is the world’s biggest stadium. Narendra Modi Stadium will be the place to be on the 19th of November, but the chances of us making there are slim.

We have also named Test cricket grounds after two of our former leaders – R. Premadasa and Mahinda Rajapaksa. India by the way has nine grounds named after Jawaharlal Nehru, their first Prime Minister.

Strange that in our part of the world we don’t name cricket grounds after players. India at least has named stands after their former greats. There is Gautam Gambhir Stand, Bishan Singh Bedi Stand and Mohinder Amarnath Stand in Delhi while Hyderabad has Mohammad Azharuddin and VVS Laxman stands. We also should follow suit and name some stands after our greats. At least we should have a stand named after late Gamini Dissanayake if not a ground after him.

Sunil Gavaskar has a stand in his beloved Bombay. But he doesn’t seem to fancy the idea. The reason being that many people in his hometown think that simply because there’s a stand named after him in Wankhede, he gets free tickets for the game. If that’s the plight of Mr. Gavaskar, one of the true greats of the game, imagine the plight of poor reporters who get bombarded with calls during match days requesting for tickets.

Lucknow where Sri Lanka will play Australia and Netherlands is one of India’s new cricket grounds. Some fans are worried that after Sri Lanka’s poor campaign in the World Cup so far, they might struggle in rest of the games and even the Dutch could expose some of the chink of their armour.

Some others claim that the Dutch were not at full strength during the World Cup qualifiers and with five of their players returning from County Cricket, they will be hard to beat. However, Sri Lanka should cruise past them. If the Australia – South Africa game is any indication, the Lucknow venue is not a patch of Delhi or Hyderabad, which were belters. It is more like Madras and there will be some assistance for spin. Sri Lanka should beat the Dutch and could beat the Aussies as well as conditions are expected to suit them.

The biggest plus point in this World Cup has been the form of Kusal Mendis. The stunning knocks that he made against two good bowling attacks gives you the assurance that this World Cup will mark his journey towards becoming one of the greats of the sport.

Kumar Sangakkara’s batting feats are hard to match leave alone breaking them. On Tuesday, Mendis scored the fastest hundred in World Cups by a Sri Lankan off just 65 balls, five deliveries fewer than Sanga.

From his school days there was little doubt that he was going to be the future of Sri Lankan cricket. There has been the occasional stunner but consistency has been missing. Babar Azam and Kusal Mendis are the same age; 28. Babar is averaging 47 in Tests and 57 in ODIs while Kusal’s average is lingering around 30s.

But becoming a father seems to have helped him to settle down. He’s become more responsible now and rash strokes have been cut down drastically and are only played when he is set.Wicketkeeping has probably helped him too as he sees the ball better. He is also contributing to the team by means of setting fields and these are all good signs.

Still a few doubts remain though. Why he didn’t turn up for the national anthem before the start of the game against South Africa in Delhi and was cramps a good enough reason to be away from the whole fielding innings against Pakistan in Hyderabad pose interesting questions. But we should give him the benefit of the doubt. After all, there is no saint without a past and no sinner without a future!



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North Korea holds first international marathon in six years

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The marathon, which was launched in 1981, took place annually in April to celebrate the birth of its founding leader Kim Il Sung [BBC]

North Korea has held the Pyongyang International Marathon for the first time in six years, welcoming some 200 foreign runners to the streets of the reclusive country’s capital.

The marathon, which was launched in 1981, took place annually in April to celebrate the birth of its founding leader Kim Il Sung.

Before Sunday’s marathon, the race was last held in 2019, wherein 950 foreigners participated. North Korea sealed itself off the following year, when the Covid-19 pandemic hit.

North Korea has been slow to reopen since, allowing only Russian tourists into its capital since last year.

Getty Images The stadium - where runners start and finish their race - was filled with spectators, many of them cheering and waving gold-coloured paper flags
Some 200 foreign runners participated in the latest edition of the Pyongyang International Marathon [BBC]

Runners have had to enter the country as part of an organised tour group, as was the case before the pandemic.

Koryo Tours, a Beijing-based travel agency listed as an “exclusive partner” on the event website, offers six-day marathon tours at 2,195 euros ($2,406) including flights to and from Beijing.

“The Pyongyang Marathon is an extremely unique experience as it provides an opportunity to interact with locals,” the agency wrote on its website.

Sunday’s marathon route took participants past landmarks across the city, including the Kim Il Sung stadium, the Arch of Triumph built to commemorate Kim Il Sung’s role in resisting Japanese rule, and the Mirae Future Scientists’ Street said to be a residential district for scientists and engineers.

Pictures online show the stadium – where runners start and finish their race – filled with spectators, many of them cheering and waving gold-coloured paper flags.

Pak Kum Dong, a North Korean runner, told Reuters news agency: “The eyes of our people on me helped me to bear the difficulties whenever I feel tired.”

There is no publicly available information on race results.

North Korea had only statred to scale back Covid-19 restrictions in the middle of 2023.

In Feburary, it allowed some Western tourists into the remote, eastern city Rason, but suspended those tours just weeks after.

[BBC]

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IPL 2025: Orange Cap and Purple Cap leaderboards – Siraj joint-second among bowlers

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Nicholas Pooran is the leading run-getter in IPL 2025 after Sundays [06] match. [Cricinfo]
Check out who the top run-getters and top wicket-takers are in IPL 2025 after Sunday’s match between Sunrisers Hyderabad [SRH] and Gujarat Titans [GT] in Hyderabad.
Orange Cap leaderboard
Lucknow Super Giants’ (LSG) Nicholas Pooran stays on top of the run-scorers’ table, with 201 runs from four innings. He scored only 12 in his latest knock, against Mumbai Indians (MI). But before that, he got 75 from 30 balls against Delhi Capitals (DC), 70 from 26 against SRH  and 44 from 30 against Punjab Kings [PBKS]’
GT opener Sai Sudarshan is in second position after a rare failure against SRH – he scored 5 off nine balls. Before this, he had scored 49, 63 and 74. All up, he has 191 runs in four innings. Mitchell Marsh is at No. 3. He has 184 runs from four innings. There was a duck against PBKS, but Marsh scored a half-century every other time he walked out.
Purple Cap leaderboard

Noor Ahmad, the Chennai Super Kings (CSK) left-arm wristspinner, continues to head the Purple Cap table with ten wickets from four games. His spell of 4 for 18 in CSK’s first game  against MI, remains his best so far.

DC’s Mitchell Starc who picked up his maiden five-for in T20s, against SRH remains second on the list with nine wickets in three games.

GT’s Mohammed Siraj equalled Starc’s tally on Sunday night with his own IPL best, albeit he has played four games to Starc’s three. Siraj picked up 4 for 17 against SRH to hand them their four successive loss, and was named the Player of the Match.

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IPL 2025: Siraj, Gill and Washington hand Sunrisers fourth successive defeat

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Gujarat Tirans brushed aside Sunrisers Hyderabad by seven wickets [Cricinfo]

Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) suffered another batting malfunction, this time on a slow, black-soil surface at home, crashing to their fourth successive defeat in IPL 2025.  Having lost Travishek in the powerplay, SRH waited until the 13th over to see the first six of the innings, and managed only one more after that Mohammad Siraj caused irreparable damage right from the start, ending with his career-best IPL figures of 4 for 17.

Pat Cummins’ cameo (22* off nine balls) and then his dismissal of Jos Buttler for a duck in Gujarat Titans’ (GT) chase of 153 gave SRH some hope, but that faded away once  Washington Sundar clattered 23 off nine balls in the powerplay. Earlier in the day, GT didn’t need Washington with the ball, but his attacking enterprise at No. 4 settled their chase on a slow pitch. Washington fell agonisingly short of a maiden IPL half-century, but his captain Shubman Gill ushered GT home, with an unbeaten 61 off 43 balls, along with Sherfane Rutherford.

Siraj had sparked the Border-Gavaskar Trophy to life when he gave Travis Head a send-off in Adelaide last December. Four months on, Siraj was bowling to Head for the first time in T20s, and the battle lasted just five balls. After Head scored two fours off Siraj, the fast bowler struck with his trademark wobble-seam delivery, having him chip a catch to midwicket for 8.

Abhishek Sharma hit four fours before Siraj had him miscuing a catch to mid-on in his third over of the powerplay. It was Siraj’s 100th wicket in the IPL and sixth in the powerplay, the most by a bowler in that phase so far this season, with an economy rate of 6.27.

Siraj then returned in the death to york both Aniket Verma, the last recognised batter for SRH, and Simarjeet Singh, their Impact Player.

With both Head and Abhishek gone early,Rashid Khan, who was coming into this game on the back of figures of 4-0-54-0, could afford to ease himself in. He started fairly well by giving away just 10 runs in his first two overs, but when he erred in length, Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klassen dispatched him to the fence. Rashid finished with 4-0-31-0, going wicketless for a third successive game, and with tournament figures of 1 for 143 in 14 overs at an economy rate of 10.21

Left-arm fingerspinner Ravisrinivasan  Sai Kishore,  on the other hand, showed remarkable control over his length and variations. He claimed the big wicket of Klaasen by knocking him over with a quick dart, which skidded off the pitch, for 27 off 19 balls. Sai Kishore also had Reddy holing out for 31 off 34 balls and finished with 4-0-24-2.

That SRH passed 150 was down to Cummins’ late blows. He was the only SRH batter in the top eight to have a strike rate of over 160.

It appeared like GT had handed a franchise debut to Washington to primarily match his offspin up with SRH’s left-hander heavy top order. But with Siraj dominating the powerplay and Sai Kishore taking care of the middle overs, GT ended up not using his offspin.

Washington then walked out to bat at No. 4 after his childhood friend B Sai Sudarshan and Buttler fell cheaply in successive overs. Washington took advantage of the last over of the powerplay, smoking Simarjeet for two sixes and two fours. It provided a throwback to Washington of 2016, when he opened the batting, alongside Abhinav Mukund, in the TNPL and showed the intent to hit over the top. Just like that, Washington dumped SRH’s Impact Player out of the attack.

Washington continued to attack even after that. When the ambidextrous Kamindu Mendis darted one on the stumps with his right hand, Washington manufactured swinging room and laced him over extra-cover for four. Washington seemed set for a fifty until he holed out one shy of the landmark in the 14th over.

Gill, who had already crossed 50 by that point, finished the job along with Rutherford, who hit an unbeaten 35 off 16 balls.

Brief scores:
Gujarat Titans 153 for 3 in 16.4 overs (Shubman Gill 61*, Washington Sundar  49, Sherfaine Rutherford 35*; Mohammed Shami 2-28, Pat Cumminss 1-26) beat Sunrisers Hyderabad 152 for 8 in 20 overs (Abhishek Sharma 18, Ishan Krishan 17, Nitish Kumar Reddy 31, Heinrich Klassen 27, Aniket Verma 18,Pat Cummins 22*; Mohammed  Siraj 4-17, Ravisrinivasan Sai Kishore 2-24, Prasidh Krishna 2-25)by seven wickets

[Cricinfo]

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