Sports
Versatile and unstoppable – Kamindu Mendis’ star continues to rise
Rex Clementine in Galle
Just a stone’s throw from Galle lies Boosa, a place once infamous for its dark past during the second JVP insurrection in the late 80s. But now, it’s giving us something to cheer about – the rise of cricket sensation Kamindu Mendis, who hails from this very town.
Kamindu’s father once had a flourishing hardware business in Boosa, but he has since closed up shop and moved to Colombo, following his son’s cricketing success. In a family of three, Kamindu is the middle child, with both his elder sister and younger brother being university graduates. So, if you’re wondering where the young cricketer gets his smarts, the apple clearly didn’t fall far from the tree.
Watching Kamindu bat is like watching a master at work. And when he speaks to the media, it’s just as engaging – he offers deep insights, a commitment to always improving, and a fearlessness that promises even greater things ahead. It reminds one of Steve Waugh’s book, ‘Never Satisfied’, give it ten years, and Kamindu could be writing the sequel.
It’s a fool’s errand to start comparing young cricketers to legends of the game, especially when we’ve seen many promising talents get swept away by fame and fortune. But facts are facts – Kamindu’s Test start has outshone even Aravinda de Silva and Kumar Sangakkara, two of Sri Lanka’s finest.
Spotted from a young age, Kamindu captained Richmond College, Galle, to victory in the All Island Under-13 Championship. At just 16, he was drafted into the squad for the 2015 ICC Youth World Cup in Bangladesh. By the next edition, he was leading the Sri Lankan side.
Back then, all the buzz was about Kamindu’s ability to bowl with both hands. Everyone harped on about his ambidexterity, but no one paid attention to his batting. We all missed the forest for the trees. Well, we’re catching up now, and it’s clear he’s no one-trick pony.
What sets Kamindu apart is his ability to play the ball so late, giving him more time than most to make his moves. Few can say they’ve gone to England on their first tour and come back with the Player of the Series award. We’ve got something special here, no doubt about it.
A hallmark of any great batsman is how they handle the short ball. You don’t have to be a master of the hook or pull shots, but you need a game plan. Take Aravinda de Silva, for instance – he took on the short ball with a hook or pull. On the other hand, Steve Waugh didn’t mess with it; he’d either leave it alone or take it on the body. The key is to have a strategy and stick to it, and that’s exactly what Kamindu does – he knows how to handle the short ball without a second thought.
Kamindu made his Test debut at 23 and notched up a half-century against a quality team like Australia. Yet, he was put on the back burner for two years. Turns out, it was a blessing in disguise. When everything is handed to
feayou on a silver platter, it’s easy to take things for granted – look no further than the other Mendis. Go figure. Sometimes being sidelined makes you hungrier, and Kamindu showed that by piling on runs in domestic cricket, forcing the selectors to give him another shot.
It’s like Adam Gilchrist, who thrived under pressure at number seven for Australia, knowing he had to carry the lower order. Kamindu has had similar success, and now, with his promotion to number five, he’s already scored a century. There’s even talk of moving him up to number three because that’s where the best batters belong. He’s already taking on the second new ball; why not let him handle the first? After all, Boosa is not known for the faint hearted.
Sports
Ten-try Trinity tear Royal apart
Trinity College ended a 15-year wait for silverware with a commanding 58-26 win over Royal College, running in ten tries to clinch the Dialog Schools Rugby Knockouts 2026 President’s Trophy at Sugathadasa Stadium.
In a final rich in rivalry, Trinity struck early and never relented. Royal’s indiscipline proved costly as Trinity moved the ball fluently, Kevin Weerakoon opening the scoring. Royal briefly responded through a driving maul finished by Lemitha Amerasinghe, but their lead was short-lived.
Trinity hit back with precision, Sadeesha Weerawansa and Dimath Abeypitiya combining before the latter crossed twice. Despite another maul try from Disas Pathirana, Trinity’s attacking edge stood out. Abdul Malik’s cross-kick found Ammaar Manzil, while Malik added a try of his own as Trinity led 27-12 at the break.
Any hopes of a Royal comeback were swiftly ended. Skipper Shan Althaf struck twice after the restart, while Malik orchestrated proceedings. Further tries from Hamza Abdeen and Manzil underlined Trinity’s dominance.
Royal managed late consolation scores through Hiruka Jayadinu and Akira Yatawara, but it was Althaf who sealed the rout, completing his hat-trick to cap a memorable triumph.
Meanwhile, Lumbini Vidyalaya etched their name in history with a 17-10 win over Dharmaraja College in the Premier Trophy.
In the Chairman’s Trophy final played at the Royal College Sports Complex between Madina National School, Kandy and Central College, Maharagama, Central College Maharagama won 20-19.
In the run-up to the President’s Trophy final, Royal beat S. Thomas’ College 25-5 in a lopsided quarter-final before defeating Isipathana in the semi-final 39-13 to reach the final. Trinity College downed Zahira College 32-23 in their quarter-final fixture before beating a strong Wesley outfit 49-29 to book their berth in the final.
A highlight of this year’s Chairman’s Trophy Final was the inspiring journey of Madina National School, Kandy, whose rise to the final reflects the success of grassroots rugby development initiatives supported by Dialog.
Sports
Taking Sri Lankan players out of their comfort zones
One of cricket’s most battle-hardened operators is Steve Waugh. He may not have possessed the silken elegance of his twin brother Mark Waugh, but when it came to rolling up his sleeves and digging in, few did it better. Nicknamed the ‘Iceman’, Waugh made a career out of staring adversity in the face and refusing to blink.
His back-to-the-wall double hundred in Jamaica didn’t just win a Test, it snapped the spine of West Indies’ dominance that had stretched over decades. That was vintage Waugh: when the chips were down, he didn’t just hold the fort, he rebuilt it brick by brick.
Never one to take a backward step, Waugh once broke his nose attempting a catch off Mahela Jayawardene at Asgiriya. Surgeons advised him to sit out the Colombo Test and let the wounds heal. But for Waugh, the thought of Australia conceding a series was a bridge too far. He took the field against medical advice, a call that summed up his appetite for the fight.
He was no less formidable as a leader. The way he handled a young, wayward Ricky Ponting, then prone to off-field scrapes, has passed into cricketing folklore. Waugh didn’t just build a team; he forged a culture. His book ‘Out of My Comfort Zone’ remains a manual on how elite sportsmen must push the envelope if they are to stay ahead of the curve.
It is perhaps a book that should find its way into a few Sri Lankan kit bags. Too many current players appear content to play within themselves, happy to nudge and nurdle rather than step out of the crease and take the game on. At the highest level, though, comfort zones are quicksand. If you stand still for too long you will sink.
Champion leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga now finds himself under the scanner, his recurring hamstring injury becoming a stubborn thorn in both his side and Sri Lanka’s ambitions. Earlier this year, the injury ruled him out of the World Cup, with an initial recovery timeline of six weeks, enough, on paper, to make the IPL.
But cricket, as ever, had a twist in the tale.
In the aftermath of the World Cup, Sri Lanka Cricket took stock. While the team did reasonably well to reach the second round, there was a lingering sense of a chance missed, especially at a home World Cup where a semi-final berth was there for the taking. The consensus in cricketing corridors was simple: with a full-strength bowling attack, Sri Lanka could have gone deeper.
Determined not to leave things to chance again, the board drew a line in the sand, no fitness, no NOC. Players were required to clear stringent fitness tests to secure No Objection Certificates for franchise leagues, including the IPL. Hasaranga, along with a few others, found the bar a stiff one to clear.
Unlike Nuwan Thushara, whose case has taken a legal turn, Hasaranga’s issue is less about agility and more about durability. On the field, he is as sharp as they come, electric in the deep, capable of pulling off screamers and hitting the stumps on the fly. But the body, it seems, has not kept pace with the skill.
Fresh off injury, pushing too hard carries the risk of another breakdown. As a result, Hasaranga has opted out of fitness tests, leaving him without an NOC and consequently, out of the IPL with Lucknow Super Giants. Head Coach Tom Moody has already indicated that the franchise is scouting for a replacement, a clear sign that the wheels of professional cricket wait for no one.
The immediate loss is financial, a tidy USD 220,000, roughly LKR 70 million. But in the grand scheme, that’s loose change compared to what’s at stake. Not long ago, Royal Challengers Bangalore splashed over USD 1 million on him and he repaid the faith by finishing as their leading wicket-taker in 2022.
Since then, however, his stock has dipped. Not for lack of skill, Hasaranga still has the ability to turn games on their head, but because franchises are increasingly wary of whether he can last the distance over a full season. In franchise cricket, availability is often the best ability and Hasaranga’s repeated breakdowns have raised a few eyebrows.
The message, then, is clear. Hasaranga needs to take a leaf out of Waugh’s book. Step out of the comfort zone. Tighten the screws on fitness. Watch the weight. Treat the body like the temple that houses his talent.
No one is asking him to morph into Virat Kohli, hitting the gym at dawn and steering clear of butter chicken avoiding it like a plague. But at the very least, the basics must be ticked off. At this level, you don’t just play the game, you prepare for it, day in, day out.
There’s also a bigger storm brewing. Missing the IPL without an NOC could open the door to a potential two-year ban, a prospect that would be a bitter pill to swallow for the player.
For Hasaranga, this must be a line-in-the-sand moment. Because in international cricket, as Waugh showed time and again, you either get out of your comfort zone or the game moves on without you.
by Rex Clementine
Latest News
Sooryavanshi blitz, Jurel 81* help Rajasthan Royals take down Royal Challengers Bengaluru with ease
Vaibhav Sooriyavanshi equalled his own record for the fastest half-century, off 15 balls, in a six-fest on a flat Guwahati deck as Rajasthan Royals walloped Royal Challengers Bengaluru for their fourth straight win.
RCB hit seven sixes through their 20 overs in an innings where they went all out, seemingly mindful of the challenge Sooryavanshi would pose. And pose he did, hitting seven sixes off his own blade, in a scarcely believable exhibition of brutal hitting.
Reputation counted for little. If it was Jasprit Bumrah the other night, it was Josh Hazlewood’s turn to come under Sooryavanshi’s wheel on Friday. By the time he was dismissed for a 26-ball 78, toe-ending a flat-batted hit to long-on off Krunal Pandya, RR’s asking rate in a 202 chase was just over six with 11.5 overs remaining.
Sooryavanshi’s uninhibited hitting was matched by Dhruv Jurel’s scintillating stroke play, the pair effectively snuffed out RCB’s hopes in the powerplay itself as they plundered 97 – the highest of the season. Although RR lost a couple of wickets in a rush thereafter, the result was never really in doubt.
RCB’s defence was given an early lift when the returning Hazlewood struck in the second over to remove Yashasvi Jaiswal. After conceding a couple of sixes off the short ball, Hazlewood responded smartly by going cross-seam and into the pitch to induce the edge. But the delight at having struck early dissipated quickly as Sooryavanshi seized control by rattling off three boundaries and a six in succession in his next over.
Each of the four boundaries pierced a different arc. The short ball was carved behind point, the hard length into the pitch was muscled over mid-on, the fuller one driven crisply between cover and mid-off, and when tested with the bumper, Sooryavanshi fetched it from outside off and nailed the pull over deep square for six.
And remarkably, it wasn’t just Hazlewood under the pump. Bhuvneshwar Kumar – who had nearly dismissed him first ball with a late-curving inswinging yorker, only for the teenager to dig it out and shovel it straight back for four – was also taken apart. In the fifth over, Sooryavanshi swatted him for back-to-back sixes to bring up his half-century.
Keeping pace with Sooryavanshi stroke for stroke can’t be easy, but Jurel managed it seamlessly, without ever looking like he was trying to. He capped off the powerplay by hitting rookie Abhinandan Singh for a sequence of 4, 6, 4, 0, 6, 4 to end an extraordinary passage.
Jurel’s fast hands were the defining feature of that over – whether it was picking length early to pull or using his wrists to whip the ball into the top tier over deep square. He would later take charge of the innings, tightening his approach after a flurry of wickets, and finishing unbeaten on 76 off 36 balls.
Jurel’s 68-run fifth-wicket stand with Ravindra Jadeja then guided RR home comfortably, steadying things after Krunal briefly stirred RCB’s hopes with back-to-back strikes of Sooryavanshi and Shimron Hetmyer in the ninth over.
RR went through a quiet passage of four overs without a boundary, but the early onslaught from Sooryavanshi and Jurel meant they could afford to play out a few quiet overs fully knowing RCB were a spinner short, as they activated Venkatesh Iyer as an impact player for batting firepower in place of Suyash Sharma.
The match had a blockbuster opening act, with Jofra Archer’s vicious, rip-roaring bouncer sending back Phil Salt for a golden duck. But Virat Kohli fought fire with fire, hitting him for three boundaries in his next over, before Archer struck back to remove the in-form Devdutt Padikkal.
This didn’t affect Kohli, though, as he shredded a much-talked-about matchup with Sandeep Sharma (who had dismissed him seven times in 18 innings) by thumping him over the infield for two fours. But trouble soon came RCB’s way as Ravi Bishnoi struck two quick blows to leave them 73 for 4.
In his first two outings, Rajat Patidar went crash-bang-wallop from the get-go. But a top-order wobble forced him to dig deep. He played himself in, getting to 20 off 22 balls at one stage. And then, three overs later, he brought up a half-century off 35 balls. One of the reasons for this surge was his surety in stroke-making.
The two sixes he hit off Nandre Burger in the 15th had that stamp of authority. A gentle extension of his arms to loft one cleanly over long-off laid down the marker, but the hop back to whip a short ball aimed at his ribs over deep square leg was the blockbuster.
With none of Romario Shepherd or Tim David coming off with the bat, RCB brought in Venkatesh Iyer as their Impact Player, leaving Suyash on the bench. And Venkatesh gave an excellent account of himself on RCB debut, finishing the innings off with a cameo 29 that pushed them past 200.
As it turned out, it was nowhere near enough.
Brief scores:
Rajasthan Royals 202 for 4 (Yashasvi Jiswal 13, Dhruv Jurel 81*, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi 78, Ravindra Jadeja 24*; Josh Hazelwood 2-44, Krunal Pandya 2-30) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru 201 for 8 in 20 overs (Virat Kohli32, Devudutt Padikkal 14, Rajat Patidar 63, Tim David 13, Romario Shepherd 22, Venkatesh Iyer 29*; Jofra Archer 2-33, Sandeep Sharma 1-47, Ravi Bishnoi 2-32, Ravindra Jadeja 1-14, Brijesh Sharma 2-37) by six wickets
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