Sports
World Cup discard Hirun continues with Bradmanesque average
By Reemus Fernando
Sri Lanka Under 19 discard Hirun Kapurubandara continued his red hot form for St. Joseph’s and Dinusha Peiris scored an unbeaten half century for Trinity as the two teams booked their semi-final berths of the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ tournament on Tuesday.
While Peiris scored an unbeaten 78 (in 93 balls, 6x4s, 3x6s) for Trinity to beat Mahanama by eight wickets, Kapurubandara cracked 55 runs in 40 balls inclusive of four boundaries and four sixes to set the stage for the Joes to beat Richmond.
Despite being in red hot form, Kapurubandara has not found a place in the Sri Lanka Under 19 squad for the upcoming Youth World Cup.
He was dropped from the squad ahead of Sri Lanka Under 19s tour of Pakistan but since then he has maintained a Bradmanesque average.
He has scored 564 runs in nine innings during the ongoing Under 19 Division I tournament. His tally includes three centuries and three half centuries. At the end of yesterday’s match his average was calculated at 112.8 runs.
Results
Trinity beat Mahanama by eight wickets at Kandana
Scores:
Mahanama
158 all out in 42.1 overs (Chamika Heenatigala 36, Koojana Perera 33, Inuka Karannagoda 20; Manula Kularatne 3/33, Jayavi Liyanagama 2/22, Tharana Wimaladharma 2/32)
Trinity
162 for 2 in 34.1 overs (Dinusha Peiris 78 n.o., Viduka Dammage 52, Supun Waduge 22)
St. Joseph’s beat Richmond by two wickets (D/L method) at Thurstan ground
Scores:
Richmond
164 for 8 in 39 overs (Kaveesha Induwara 57, Thamindu Pradeeptha 52; Yenula Dewthusa 3/33, Lahiru Amarasekara 2/31)
St. Joseph’s
170 for 8 in 37.4 overs (Hirun Kapurubandara 55, Lahiru Amarasekara 32; Malsha Tharupathi 3/17, Seneth Sisan 2/26)
Semi Finals
De Mazenod V St. Joseph’s at Surrey Grounds Maggona on November 18
Trinity V Royal College at Surrey Grounds Maggona on November 19
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Mendis’ 93 not out lifts Sri Lanka to 271 for 6, despite Rashid three-for
Kusal Mendis’ 93 not out off 117 balls provided the backbone, Janith Liyanage punched out a 46, and DunithWellalage produced late burst, as Sri Lanka strode to 271 for 6. On a track that offers turn, and at a venue at which chasing has historically been difficult, Sri Lanka’s is a solid – if not imposing – score, even if the hosts are resting some key bowlers.
Adil Rashid added to his excellent Sri Lanka record with 3 for 44, and was unsurprisingly England’s primary weapon, given the conditions. Sam Curran, Liam Dawson, and Rehan Ahmed claimed a wicket each, as England found frequent-enough breakthroughs to cut partnerships short before they grew truly worrying. Although Sri Lanka will be pleased with their score, England will believe it is within their reach.
Mendis was cautious early on. Arriving in the 11th over, he faced out 12 scoreless deliveries – 10 of those from England’s legspinners – before he nurdled himself onto the scoreboard. He was awake to scoring opportunities, particularly in his favoured zones square of the wicket, such as when he struck Rehan for successive boundaries behind point in the 15th over.
But as England continued to bowl tightly to him, and the spinners extracted turn from a dry surface, Mendis chose to proceed in a middling gear, pushing for singles and twos instead of dusting off his more aggressive sweeps. He got to 50 off 62 balls, but slowed down a little after that, particularly after he lost Liyanage, with whom he had put on 88 for the fifth wicket.
Although Mendis hit only a single four after the 41st over, Sri Lanka had Wellalage to crash the finishing boundaries. He hit three fours and a six in his 12-ball 25 not out. Mendis was in the 90s in the last two overs, but Wellalage claimed the majority of the strike, taking a particular shine to Jamie Overton in the final over, which went for 23.
Rashid was masterful with the ball almost from the outset. He slipped a googly past the defences of Kamil Mishara 10 balls into his first spell, then later trapped Dhananjaya de Silva in front, having beaten the batter in the flight. Then in the 43rd over, he cramped Liyanage up and took a simple catch off his own bowling, just as Liyanage was preparing to press the pedal to the floor.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 271 for 6 in 50 overs (Pathum Nissanka 21, Kamil Mishara 27, Kusal Mendis 93*, Janith Liyanage 46, Dunith Welalage 25*; Adil Rashid 3-44) vs England
[Cricinfo]
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We didn’t get justice from ICC: Bangladesh sports advisor
Asif Nazrul, the Bangladesh government’s sports advisor, on Thursday said that the ICC and the BCCI made no effort to convince the the Bangladesh Cricket Board of the security for their players in the upcoming ICC T20 World Cup, scheduled to be hosted in India and Sri Lanka. He also added that they did not deliver justice to their plea of shifting matches to Sri Lanka.
Latest News
Jacks out with illness as Sri Lanka bat against England
Sri Lanka won the toss and chose to bat first in the opening ODI in Colombo, a venue that has historically been difficult for chasing teams. England captain Harry Brook said his team would have batted first as well.
England made one change to the XI they had named on the eve of the match, with allrounder Will Jacks having taken ill overnight. Jacks, an offspin-bowling allrounder, has been replaced in the XI by legspinning allrounder Rehan Ahmed.
Sri Lanka, meanwhile, have opted for a young attack, perhaps with a view to resting the more experienced bowlers for the T20Is coming up. There is no Wanindu Hasaranga or Maheesh Theekshana in the XI. Left-arm spinner Dunith Wellalage and legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay will lead the spin attack instead, with the likes of Dhananjaya de Silva and Charith Asalanka also able to bowl.
Asitha Fernando and Pramod Madushan are the frontline seamers.
Although conditions were warm and fair at the toss, there is a chance showers could roll through later.
England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook (capt.), Jos Buttler (wk), Sam Curran, Rehan Ahmed, Jamie Overton, Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid
Sri Lanka: Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis (wk), Dhananjaya de Silva, Charith Asalanka, Janith Liyanage, Pavan Ratnayake, Dunith Wellalage, Pramod Madushan, Jeffrey Vandersay, Asitha Fernando
[Cricinfo]
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