Sports
Badminton king Buwaneka sees his shuttlecock going off the court
by A Special Sports Correspondent
Seasoned campaigner Buwaneka Goonathilleka beat the odds against him at the recent 71st Badminton Nationals held in Colombo and won a triple crown. But according to him the sport he loves the most is at present generating enough thoughts in him to consider whether to continue his association with badminton.
Speaking to ‘The Island’ he said that he sees the road that took him so far in the sport nearing an end; largely because he doesn’t see playing full time sport giving him the desired financial security. “My close associates from Galle see my progress as a player and my move to shift to Colombo and inquire whether I’m living the rich life that other sportsmen in Colombo enjoy. They are really mistaken. My future in life looks very bleak at present,” he said.
Goonathilleka created sensation this year at the nationals when he won the men’s open singles and then doubled up with Viren Nettasinghe to bag the men’s doubles. His third title came when he teamed up with Natasha Gunasekare and won the mixed doubles. At 28 years of age he is playing his best badminton and is looking for more exposure at overseas tournaments and a better pay cheque at the end of the month. But he is a long way from creating that dream life.
Knowing that badminton won’t shower him with money he has started to catch up on his postponed education and is now following a degree in IT at the SLIIT Academy. He tells budding badminton players to balance doing sport with education and warns of the repercussions one would have to face in life if one neglects classroom work. Goonathilleka is a person who quit school prematurely to start earning so that he could be based in Colombo and finance his badminton dream. He was employed in his first job at MAS Holdings when he sat for the A Level Examination.
He also served the Army as a sports recruit and now works for B&D Solutions PVT Ltd. He took the responsibility of looking after himself early in life, but that early start has not given him any advantage, he complained. He is a national champion that only a few know; because badminton is not a sport that’s marketed well like cricket and rugby in this country. If not for the encouragement and blessings he gets from his loved ones and friends during these last few years in the sport it would have been a harder grind for him.
He had his humble beginnings in the sport at Richmond College Galle and won his school colours for badminton in 2014. Thanks to the rich badminton culture at school and the commitment shown by his school coaches Goonathilleka made good progress and even emerged as a schoolboy badminton champion.
In the years he has invested on badminton he has made three trips to the Commonwealth Games, been twice to the South Asian Games and once to the Asian Games. He spoke fondly about training under foreign coaches Shankar Annamalai (Malaysia) and now Indonesian coach Tony Wahyudi. At present he comes under the tutelage of Wahyudi at Rising Star Badminton Academy. A fact that must be underscored here is that Goonathilleka and his doubles partners are all from this academy and they managed to beat national poolists in these events at the nationals.
“Right now I’ve decided to stick to my pet event which is the singles because I don’t have a good doubles partner” said Goonathilleka. Till very recently Goonathilleka’s men’s doubles partner was Sachin Dias. These two players enjoyed great success together and even made it to the semis of the Commonwealth Games in the year 2018. The duo enjoyed a world ranking of 72 as at 2022-11-15. At present Goonathilleka and Nettasinghe don’t have a world ranking in the doubles event. Goonathilleka’s world ranking now in the singles event is 349. His best world ranking in the singles was 190 as at 2022-12-13.
His close associates in badminton opine that he has another five good years of badminton left in him. For the record he is 28 years old now; that was the same age when Niluka Karunarathne, Sri Lanka’s best product in badminton to date, made his debut appearance at the Olympics. With no worthwhile competition to talk about existing in the local scene for Goonathilleka this champion strangely sees himself in a position where he has to drag himself to the sports stadium for training.
But before this depressing period he used to train a maximum of three times a day with his total training hours for the day reading between 6-8 hours. A national player must have his head clear to train and dream of getting ahead in the sport of his choice. But for Goonathilleka he is lost between raising the lion flag abroad through his performances in badminton and giving the assurance to his family that he can find a way to survive the thirty days of the month without getting into financial difficulties.
He has been forced to distance himself from Sri Lanka Badminton (SLB) for reasons best known to both these parties. He was not a member of the Sri Lankan contingent that went for the last big event for badminton in the world and he is a bit bitter about what had happened. May be, at times, his decent ways are looked upon as one his weaknesses by the sports authorities. Goonathilleka said that he has experienced the thrill of victory at home to the core. “I just want to be remembered as humble player” he concluded.
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This series picks up from Bangladesh’s finest red-ball hour against arguably Pakistan’s bleakest one. Two years ago, Bangladesh came to Pakistan with six away Test wins in their history, and increased that tally by two in two weeks. Pakistan had never lost a Test to Bangladesh before that, but during late summer 2024 in Rawalpindi, a page turned in their cricketing relations.
This time around, the series takes place at an odd, off-kilter time. Neither side has played any Test cricket in six months, with Bangladesh’s last series a straightforward home wipeout of Ireland. Pakistan hosted South Africa in October, splitting the two Tests down the middle. This is the only red-ball international cricket Pakistan have played in 14 months.
Pakistan have filled that time going all in on T20 cricket, preparing for the recent T20 World Cup, before throwing themselves into a full PSL season. There will be just four days between the end of the PSL and the first day in Mirpur.
Bangladesh, meanwhile, have endured a more barren time. They refused to travel to India for the T20 World Cup and that has meant their only international cricket all year was an ODI series against Pakistan and New Zealand’s visit for a white-ball series [ODIs and T20Is]. Wins in all three mean they have a perfect record in international series in 2026 – a record that Pakistan will hope to put to a sterner test than they managed two years ago.
In 2024, Bangladesh’s seam attack outshone Pakistan’s, with Hasan Mahmud and Taskin Ahmed’s movement, and Nahid Rana’s rapid pace, causing more trouble than their Pakistani counterparts. If anything, Rana is in even better form, cutting Pakistan down in the sides’ ODI series, before shining in the recent PSL final for Zalmi, for which the BCB granted him special permission. Bangladesh’s four-man pace attack also includes Shoriful Islam and Ebadot Hossain, alongside Rana and Taskin, and could pose its own challenges against Pakistan.
Pakistan may hope the pitches allow a spin-bowling face-off instead. Soon after Bangladesh’s humbling of Pakistan in that 2024 series, Pakistan volte-faced from playing an all-seam attack in the first Test. Instead, their pitches assisted spin from ball one. To exploit that, Sajid Khan and Noman Ali have run riot on accommodating surfaces. If Mirpur offers assistance for the spinners, Pakistan will feel confident they have the personnel to go toe-to-toe with the hosts.
Mushfique Rahim struck a century in his 100th Test, against Ireland in November last year. He will take fresh guard against Pakistan, despite speculation about his impending retirement. Mushfiqur has resisted being pushed towards the end unless he wants to. His 191 against Pakistan in Rawalpindi was a testament to his hunger for runs, as was his celebration during this milestone 100th Test against Ireland. Mushfiqur remains a vital cog in the Bangladesh middle-order. Pakistan will be wary of him, particularly in Dhaka.
Sajid Khan has found his international opportunities limited to home Tests, but this wasn’t always the case. His first six Test matches all took place away from home, with his finest away moment coming in Bangladesh, at this very ground in Mirpur. With rain laying waste to the best part of three days of that Test, Sajid wrenched the game from the clutches of the weather. He took eight wickets in Bangladesh’s first innings, to bowl them out for 87, and narrowly force a follow-on. Four more in the second innings saw Bangladesh bowled out on the fifth evening, giving Pakistan a sensational innings win. This series is perhaps Sajid’s best chance to demonstrate he remains useful outside Pakistan.
Bangladesh are likely to bring in Taskin Ahmed and Nahid Rana in place of Khaled Ahmed and Hasan Murad, respectively. Shoriful Islam’s white-ball form would put pressure on Ebadot Hossain’s place.
Pakistan have been dealt a blow with Babar Azam* ruled out of the opening Test due to a left knee injury. His absence leaves a hole which is likely to be filled in by a debutant. The visitors will likely go in with two spinners in Sajid and Noman, which leaves them a choice of two of four fast bowlers. With Imam-ul-Haq back in the side, Pakistan are expected to hand a debut to one of Azan Awais and Abdullah Fazal at the top of the order.
Bangladesh (probable): Mahmudul Hasan Joy, Shadman Islam, Mominul Haque, Najmul Hossain Shanto (capt), Mushfiqur Rahim, Litton Das (wk), Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Taijul Islam, Taskin Ahmed, Shoriful Islam, Nahid Rana
Pakistan: Imam-ul-Haq, Abdullah Fazal/Azan Awais, Shan Masood (capt), Saud Shakeel, Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Salman Ali Agha, Amad Butt, Shaheen Afridi, Noman Ali, Khurram Shahzad/Hasan Ali, Sajid Khan
[Cricinfo]
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Lucknow Super Giants’ (LSG) much-vaunted pace attack applied the skids on Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in a banana-peel clash at the Ekana Stadium. They successfully defended 219 in a rain-truncated 19-overs-a-side contest three nights after 228 didn’t seem anywhere enough against Mumbai Indians.
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Then, Prince Yadav used these elements as his ally to bowl a ball to Virat Kohli that will perhaps make the top-five deliveries of the season. When RCB’s chase truly kicked into gear courtesy of Rajat Patidar, Prince returned to dismiss Devdutt Padikkal and Jitesh Sharma within five deliveries to turn the game around.
Patidar’s dismissal three balls later, to end a six-fest, all but sealed LSG’s third win in ten matches that keeps them alive mathematically. RCB remained third on 12 points, only a superior net run rate separating them from Rajasthan Royals and Gujarat Titans.
He manifests playing a World Cup with Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. On Thursday night, he bowled a ball that would make the tournament reel and get the selectors interested, if they weren’t already.
A nip-backer at high pace whooshed past Kohli’s inside edge to splay his stumps. It was Kohli’s first IPL duck since 2023. This left RCB 9 for 2 after they had lost Jacob Bethell cheaply for a fourth game on the trot.
Between finishing his second over and returning for his third, the 11th of RCB’s chase, Prince may have felt a sense of deja vu. Three weeks ago, he finished with 2 for 25 off his full quota in an innings where LSG conceded 254 against Punjab Kings. Here, Patidar threatened an incredible jailbreak as he tore into Mayank Yadav and Digvesh Rathi to pummel a 26-ball half-century.
Patidar was particularly ferocious against Rathi, hitting him for 23 off six deliveries. After some early trouble against Mayank’s high-pace, he returned the favour by nonchalantly whipping and pulling him for sixes. From 60 for 2 in seven overs, RCB ransacked 44 off the next three when Rishabh Pant summoned Prince for a third.
He began by dismissing Padikkal caught and bowled, having deceived him with a slower ball that stuck into the surface. Three balls later, he sent a ripper of a bouncer that had the woefully out-of-form Jitesh top-edge a pull to Pant. Prince now had figures of 3 for 21.
In only his second game of the season, Shahbaz Ahmed made a compelling case to start in the line-up for the rest of LSG’s campaign. He had Patidar in his first over, followed by David for a 17-ball 40 in his third, just when RCB looked like they were looking to pull off a heist. The equation came down to 33 off 12 when Krunal Pandya, promoted ahead of Romario Shepherd, hit Mohammed Shami for back-to-back sixes. With 20 needed off 6, Rathi held his nerve and conceded just one boundary as LSG won by nine runs to arrest a six-match losing streak.
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Where Marsh flew, his new opening partner Arshin Kulkarni struggled. LSG were 95 for 0 in nine overs when rain briefly stopped play. Marsh’s onslaught against his Australia mate Josh Hazlewood – lofted through the line for two sixes in his very first over – was particularly intriguing during that passage. Kulkarni went into the break amid chatter of being retired out, but he returned and fell second ball after the resumption when he hit Krunal straight to cover for 17 off 23.
Marsh’s battle against Hazlewood may have been box office, but his attack against the others wasn’t any less thrilling. He pounced on anything short from the spinners – Suyash Sharma and Krunal. Ninety of his 111 came off boundaries, and he galloped to the landmark when he hit Shepherd for three fours in his only over.
Pant then ensured the perfect finish with a cameo 32 off 10, with the last three balls of the innings, from Rasikh Dar, getting taken apart for 4, 4, 6. LSG hit 64 off their last five, which eventually made a massive difference to the end result.
Brief scores:
Lucknow Super Giants 209 for 3 in 19 overs (Mitchell Marsh 111, Arshin Kulkarni 17, Nicholas Pooran 38, Rishabh Pant 32*; Josh Hazlewood 1-49, Krunal Pandya 1-31, Rasikh Salam 1-53) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru 203 for 6 in 19 overs (Devdutt Padikkal 34, Rajat Patidar 61, Tim David 40, Krunal Pandya 28*, Romario Shepherd 23*; Mohammed Shami 1-33, Prince Yadav 3-33, Shahbaz Ahmed 2-33) by nine runs
[Cricinfo]
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