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Athapaththu’s 195* trumps Wolvaardt’s 184* in epic Sri Lanka chase

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Chamari Athapaththu bossed the chase by smashing her career-best 195 not out (Cricinfo)

Sri Lanka completed the highest successful chase in women’s ODIs, against South Africa, and the only one over 300 thanks to a sensational 195* from their captain Chamari Athapaththu. She finished with her career-best ODI score and the third highest individual score by a batter in women’s ODIs to help Sri Lanka level the series 1-1.

In a battle of the captains, Athapaththu’s knock trumped  Laura Wolvaardt’s 184* – the highest by a South African player and her fourth hundred since being named captain last September. She led South Africa to their fifth highest ODI score and highest against Sri Lanka but it was not enough.

Athapaththu and Nilakshika de Silva shared in a 179-run fifth-wicket partnership – the second-highest stand for the fifth-wicket or lower in the women’s game – and rescued Sri Lanka from 126 for 4 in the 21st over. Crucially, Sri Lanka gained two points on the  ICC Womens Championship table,  which determines qualification for the 2025 ODI World Cup. They move up to seventh spot and remain in the race for automatic entry to India next year – the top five teams along with the hosts will go through – with six matches left to play.

Sri Lanka leave South Africa after their most successful visit to these shores. Along with a squared ODI series, they won the T20I series 2-1 – their first series win over South Africa. In the immediate aftermath of that win, Athapaththu hinted international retirement but the form she displayed in the third ODI in Potchefstroom suggested she is nowhere near ready to put the bat down.

Sri Lanka had never scored 300 in an ODI before, much less chased that much but on a flat pitch with a fast outfield, Athapaththu fancied their chances. She hit the ball cleanly, was brutal straight down the ground and quick between the wickets and that was after opening the bowling and delivering a full quota of ten overs with a return of 1 for 59.

She was the senior partner in her opening stand with 18-year-old Vishmi Gunaratne and took the fight to South Africa. They put on 90 inside 16 overs before Gunaratne was given out lbw to Delmi Tucker, who was also involved in the second wicket. She took a good catch at backward point to dismiss Prasadani Weerakkody off Nadine de Klerk’s bowling and South Africa sensed an opportunity to make inroads into Sri Lanka’s middle order.

Wolvaardt brought back Ayabonga Khaka, playing in her 100th ODI, and she had immediate success. She had Hansima Karunaratne caught behind, chasing a wide one, off the first ball of her fourth over and Kavisha Dilhari caught behind down the leg side two balls later. Sinalo Jafta took both catches but the second one did her dirty as her shoulder hit the ground awkwardly and she had to leave the field. Uncapped 16-year-old Karabo Meso replaced her behind the stumps and thought she had wicket off De Silva’s first ball but umpire Jacqueline Williams was unmoved. Sri Lanka were 126 for 4 in the 21st over and Athapaththu was still there.

The Sri Lankan captain was unfazed by the mini-collapse and simply kept batting. She brought up a hundred off 78 balls in the 26th over and kept Sri Lanka on track as South Africa unraveled. Their fielding was sloppy; overthrows were offered aplenty and importantly, Athapaththu was dropped on 128 by Sune Luus at deep mid-wicket off Nonkululeko Mlaba in the 32nd over. At the time, Sri Lanka still needed 106 runs from 18.3 overs.

Athapaththu made the most of her let-off and continued to breeze her way through the chase with Silva providing strong support and South Africa losing their way. They sent down 19 wides and two no-balls in total and Sri Lanka cashed in. Athapaththu and de Silva combined boundary hitting with exceptional strike rotation and reached the target with five-and-half-overs – 33 balls – to spare to share the trophy

Earlier, South Africa would have been confident of claiming it after Wolvaardt scored her fastest – off 100 balls – and second successive hundred in the series against Sri Lanka. In the absence of Tazmin Brits – who underwent surgery on a meniscus tear in her left knee today – Wolvaardt has embraced the responsibility of both anchoring and accelerating the innings. She was the dominant partner in the opening partnership of 116 with Lara Goodall and scored 83 off 74 balls, while Goodall, playing in her 50th ODI, contributed 31 off 55.

South Africa’s innings stuttered through the middle period as the Sri Lankan spinners squeezed them. Goodall, Tucker and Luus were dismissed for eight runs in the space of 18 balls, but recovered thanks to their most reliable allrounder Marizanne Kapp. She and Wolvaardt shared a run-a-ball partnership of 63, and Kapp was at the other end when Wolvaardt reached her hundred before she was run-out at the end of the 35th over. South Africa were 187 for 4 at the time and the arrival of de Klerk brought an increased intensity.

De Klerk and Wolvaardt put on 92 in 80 balls for the sixth wicket, with de Klerk just establishing herself as a finisher, it was Wolvaardt who was aggressive in the stand. She hit her next 84 runs in 47 balls and South Africa scored 114 runs in their last 15 overs, at 7.6 runs an over, which seemed to set them up well until Athapaththu had the final say.

Scores:
Sri Lanka 305 for 4 in 44.3 overs (Vishmi gunarathne 26, Chamari Athapaththu 195*, Nilakshika de Silva 50*;  Ayabonga Khaka 2-54, Nadine de Klerk 1-59, Delmi Tucker 1-42) beat  South Africa 301 for 5 in 50 overs  (Laura Wolvaardt 184*, Lara Goodall 31, Marizanne Kapp 36, Nadine de Klerk 35; Kavisha  Dilhari 2-47, Chamari Athapaththu 1-59) by six wickets



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Kamindu in, Dhananjaya out as Sri Lanka flip-flop with T20 World Cup selection

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Kamindu Mendis is back after being dropped for the T20Is against England (Cricinfo)

Sri Lanka have recalled Kamindu Mendis  and  dropped Dhananjaya de Silva from their 15-man squad for the T20 World Cup that begins on Saturday. Twenty-three-year-old batter Pavan Rathnayake  has notably made the cut, as has Eshan Malinga who dislocated his shoulder on Sunday. But there was no room for seamer Pramod Madushan.

The major talking point is the return of Kamindu, who didn’t feature in the starting XI in the T20Is against Pakistan last month, and was dropped ahead of the ongoing T20I series against England. But he is back now, with Dhananjaya making way after struggling to force the pace in his recent T20I innings against England and Pakistan.

Kamindu himself hasn’t been in the best form over recent months, scoring just 159 runs in the format since the start of 2025, at an average of 19.87, though his strike rate in that period, of 130.32, gives cause for a small measure of optimism. Dhananjaya’s utility with the ball had been identified as a reason for his initial inclusion, but the ambidextrous Kamindu can fill that role too, even if he has bowled just six overs in 12 matches since the start of 2025.

This turn of events has also left the door open for left-arm-spin allrounder Dunith Wellalage to stake a claim in the playing XI, but the 23-year-old’s inexperience stands against him. He has been something of a regular in the ODI line-up but has played just six T20Is since his debut in 2024, and batted in just three of those games while picking up seven wickets. His franchise and domestic experience, however, is more substantial; he played in the SA20 for Paarl Royals last year and led Sri Lanka A in the Rising Stars Asia Cup in November.

His career T20 and ODI batting strike rates of 106.14 and 84.20, however, suggest his inclusion is one based largely on potential, and possibly his recent ODI performances – most notably his cameos against England.

Another potential-based pick is that of Rathnayake, who had made his T20I debut in Pakistan in November but was dropped for the return series at home, having batted just once in three games. His century in the third ODI against England, however, turned selectors’ heads and earned him a call-up to the T20I side, and now the World Cup squad. A strike rate of 100.00 (prior to his 40 off 22 against England on Sunday) across 25 T20 innings belies Rathnayake’s power-hitting potential. He strikes at 92.82 in List A cricket and has shown a propensity for taking on spin.

The flip-flopping regarding Kamindu, and the inclusions of Rathnayake and Wellalage, all point towards the uncertainty surrounding Sri Lanka’s middle order as they head into the World Cup. While the top three of Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara and Kusal Mendis is settled, Charith Asalanka and Dasun Shanaka, the ex and current captain, haven’t been in the best of form at Nos. 4 and 5. Since the start of 2025, Asalanka and Shanaka average 15.15 and 23.83 respectively in T20Is, though Shanaka has struck at 143.00, as opposed to Asalanka’s underwhelming 122.36.

These middle-order travails have had the knock-on effect of Sri Lanka frequently slotting Janith Liyanage at No. 7 at the expense of a fifth frontline bowling option. Liyanage has struck at 103.94 across 11 T20Is, but recently showed glimpses of his ceiling with an explosive cameo in the third T20I against Pakistan.

It is also why Kusal Perera returned to the squad for the England series, and keeps his place for the World Cup, after being dropped against Pakistan following a poor run of form to close the year. He averages 23.8 since the start of 2025, but while the runs haven’t come consistently, they have come quickly when they have come, as a strike rate of 141.1 suggests. There is a possibility that he could slot in at No. 5 or 6.

Sri Lanka have far fewer concerns with their bowling. In Dushmantha Chameera, Matheesha Pathirana and Eshan Malinga, they possess potent seam options across all stages of the innings, though the latter’s participation is currently in doubt owing to his injury. This makes the exclusions of Pramod Madushan and Nuwan Thushara understandable – the latter was a key cog in Sri Lanka’s plans over the past year before his fall-off in form towards the tail end of 2025. Binura Fernando, another frequent inclusion over the past year, couldn’t make it either.

There are also no surprises in the spin department which is headed by Wanindu Hasaranga and Maheesh Theekshana, with Wellalage, Asalanka and Kamindu expected to provide support.

Co-hosts Sri Lanka are placed in Group B of the 20-team World Cup alongside Australia, Ireland, Oman and Zimbabwe. All four of Sri Lanka’s group games are at home. They face Ireland (February 8) and Zimbabwe (February 19) at the R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, and Oman (February 12) and Australia (February 16) in Pallekele.

Sri Lanka squad for T20 World Cup 2026

Dasun Shanaka (capt), Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis, Kusal Perera, Charith Asalanka, Kamindu Mendis, Janith Liyanage, Pavan Rathnayake, Dunith Wellalage, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Dushmantha Chameera, Matheesha Pathirana, Eshan Malinga

(Cricinfo)

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China executes four more Myanmar mafia members

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A Guangdong court convicted more than 20 of the Bai family's members and associates of fraud, homicide and injury (BBC)

China has executed four members of the Bai family mafia, one of the notorious dynasties that ran scam centres in Myanmar, state media report.

They were among 21 of the family’s members and associates who were convicted of fraud, homicide, injury and other crimes by a court in Guangdong province.

Last November the court sentenced five of them to death including the clan’s patriarch Bai Suocheng, who died of illness after his conviction, state media reported.

Last week, China executed 11 members of the Ming family mafia as part of its crackdown on scam operations in South East Asia that have entrapped thousands of Chinese victims.

For years, the Bais, Mings and several other families dominated Myanmar’s border town of Laukkaing, where they ran casinos, red-light districts and cyberscam operations.

Among the clans, the Bais were “number one”, Bai Suocheng’s son previously told state media after he was detained.

The Bais, who controlled their own militia, established 41 compounds to house cyberscam activities and casinos, authorities said. Within the walls of those compounds was a culture of violence, where beatings and torture were routine.

The Bai family’s criminal activities led to the deaths of six Chinese citizens, the suicide of one person and multiple injuries, the court said.

The Bais rose to power in Laukkaing in the early 2000s after the town’s then warlord was ousted in a military operation led by Min Aung Hlaing – who now leads Myanmar’s military government.

The military leader had been looking for co-operative allies, and Bai Suocheng – then a deputy of the warlord – fitted the bill.

But the families’ empires crashed in 2023, when Beijing became frustrated by the Myanmar military’s inaction on the scam operations and tacitly backed an offensive by ethnic insurgents in the area, which marked a turning point in Myanmar’s civil war.

That led to the capture of the scam mafias and their members were handed to Beijing.

In China, they became subjects of state documentaries which emphasised Chinese authorities’ resolve to eradicate the scam networks.

With these recent executions Beijing appears to be sending a message of deterrence to would-be scammers.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to run online scams in Myanmar and elsewhere in South East Asia, according to estimates by the United Nations.

Among them are thousands of Chinese people, and their victims who they swindle billions of dollars from are mainly Chinese as well.

(BBC)

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Latest News

No decision yet on ICC meeting to discuss Pakistan boycott

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While speculation is rife about the sanctions the ICC could potentially levy on the PCB for the Pakistan government’s decision to boycott the T20 World Cup group match against India on February 15, the ICC is yet to decide if and when a Board meeting should be convened to discuss the issue.

Any discussions on sanctions normally take place at the ICC Board comprising the 12 Full Member boards and three representatives of the Associates along with the ICC chair. However, the ICC has not yet alerted the Board on any emergency meeting despite PCB indicating it is unlikely to respond officially in writing to the ICC on the boycott as well as the reason behind the government’s decision.

(Cricinfo)

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