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St. Sebastian’s dominate at Bambalapitiya

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Under 19 Cricket

by Reemus Fernando

St. Sebastian’s Moratuwa produced a strong performance against St. Peter’s in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ match at Bambalapitiya. At one stage the Sebs looked almost set to record an outright victory but rain interruptions prevented the match progressing to an interesting finish.

Richmond produced their best performance in the tournament so far when they earned first innings points against Lumbini at Darley Road. Pubudu Mihiranga collected a match bag of nine wickets. The match was hampered by rain in the afternoon session.

In a Tier ‘B’ match, De Mazenod forced St. Anthony’s Wattala to follow on at Kandana. The visitors managed to hold on to a draw. The home team took first innings points.

In the other Tier ‘B’ match, Pesandu Sanjan and Manuga Guruge fought back to restrict St. Sebastian’s Katuneriya to 141 for 9 wickets at stumps in reply to St. Thomas’ 151 runs at Katuneriya. For the home team Maheesha Sithum was the hero as he took eight wickets.

Results

Richmond record first innings win against Lumbini at Darley Road

Scores:

Lumbini 92 all out in 44.5 overs (Dinal Sewmina 26; Pubudu Mihiranga 5/33) and 115 for 7 in 54 overs (Ashan Shanilka 55; Pubudu Mihiranga 4/44)

Richmond 81 for 5 overnight 175 all out in 65.1 overs (Nikil Jayaweera 26, Minaga Ariyadasa 21, Shehan de Zoysa 54; Yashod Kavindu 2/33, Kanishka Rangana 2/19, Praveen Maneesha 3/55)

Sebs dominate at Bambalapitiya

Scores

St. Peter’s 146 all out in 38.5 overs (Joshua Sebastian 34, Jason Fernando 41, Thareen Sanketh 24n.o.; Adesh Almeida 6/31, Milantha Silva 2/47) and 105 for 6 in 34 overs (Dilana Damsara 50; Joshua Sebastian 33; Malintha Silva 3/17, Koshendra Fernando 2/40)

St. Sebastian’s 152 for 4 overnight 275 for 9 decl. in 78 overs (Ryan Dissanayake 46, Adesh Almeida 62, Lashen Fernando 26, Shefan Fernando 50n.o., Koshendra Fernando 37; Ethan Ransilige 2/28, Tharin Senvidu 2/43, Thareen Sanketh 2/45, Enosh Peterson 2/15)

Tier ‘B’

De Mazenod on first innings at Kandana

Scores

De Mazenod 305 for 8 decl. in 66 overs (Sharith Sudeena 66, Neshan Dias 62, Shevan Menusha 27, Dinosh Jelon 28, Praneeth Vithanage 22, Geenod Perera 27, Thisanga Semith 28n.o., Savinu Chanthula 20n.o.; Chamod Sandeepa 2/58, Akash Thejaka 3/58)

St. Anthony’s Wattala 132 all out in 71.3 overs (Harsha Weerasooriya 44, Hithesh Ruwanda 23; Sherith Sudeena 4/32, Praneeth Vithanage 4/22) and 109 for 7 in 42 overs (Shanel Yogarathna 21, Ridma Colombage 20n.o.; Sharith Sudeena 2/50, Savinu Chanthula 2/27, Dinidu Sasmith 2/05)

St. Thomas’ 151, St. Sebastian’s 141/9 at Katuneriya

Scores

St. Thomas’ 151 all out in 44.5 overs (Pesandu Sanjan 51, Manuga Guruge 25n.o., Loshitha Diksith 24; Maheesha Sithum 8/58)

St. Sebastian’s Katuneriya 141 for 9 in 37.5 overs (Menura Akarshana 63, Maheesha Sithum 33; Manuga Guruge 4/27 , Pesandu Sanjan 2/31)



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Amelia Kerr appointed new New Zealand women’s cricket captain

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Amelia Kerr made her international debut when she was 16 years old [Cricinfo]

Allrounder Amelia Kerr has been appointed New Zealand captain for all formats, taking over from Sophie Devine who retired from ODIs following the 2025 World Cup and gave up the T20I captaincy.

Kerr’s first assignment is a home ODI and T20I series against Zimbabwe later this month.

“The captaincy doesn’t change who I am, I am still the same person and will give everything I can to lead this group and hopefully bring our country success,” Kerr said in a statement from New Zealand Cricket. “One of my favourite quotes is: ‘He aha te mea nui o te ao? He Tāngata, He Tāngata, He Tāngata. We are people first. As a group we look out for each other, we celebrate each other’s success and we represent our people.

“Encouraging others and building belief around us so we can all be the best we can be both as people and as cricketers.”

Kerr, 25, has played 84 ODIs and 88 T20Is since making her debut in 2016. She has 2304 ODI runs at an average of 41.14, and 106 wickets at an average of 30.61. In T20Is she’s scored 1453 runs at a strike rate of 109.74 and 95 wickets with an economy rate of 6.09. Kerr captained Wellington Blaze to back-to-back Super Smash titles in 2023-24 and 2024-25.

Ben Sawyer, the New Zealand coach, hailed Kerr’s leadership ability. “Melie has been an integral member of the squad for many years and deeply understands what it means to be a White Fern and represent New Zealand,” Sawyer said. “She’s an outstanding leader not only through her performances on the field, but also in the respect she has from the playing group off it.

“She has a sound understanding of the game and has strong leadership experience from the games she has captained the White Ferns [in] and her time leading the Wellington Blaze over the past three years.

“We believe leading the White Ferns can take Melie’s game to the next level and know she’s ready to step up and lead this team forward. Melie leading this team at this stage of her career ensures we have continuity and stability through the next cycle to 2029.”

The New Zealand squads for the series against Zimbabwe will be named on February 20. The three-match T20I series begins on February 25 in Hamilton.

[Cricinfo]

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England face unexpected test of nerve in Italy showdown

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Harry Brook fell trying to ramp Michael Leask against Scotland [Cricinfo]

In any other context, this would be an ideal palate-cleanser for England as they reset their campaign and cast their eyes forward to next week’s Super Eights in Sri Lanka. Saturday’s five wicket win over Scotland has put Harry Brook’s team on the brink of progression, alongside the Group C leaders West Indies, and it would take perhaps the most embarrassing defeat in their international history for that to fail to come to pass.

But, in the context of what we’ve witnessed of England’s campaign so far, is anyone willing, categorically, to rule it out? Not after the sensational scenes that the Azzurri set in motion in Mumbai last week, they won’t.

If England’s anxieties had been all too apparent in their last-ball victory over Nepal, then Italy’s clinical dismembering of the same opponents four days later showcased an entirely different mindset. Their joy was infectious: simply to be part of the conversation at their first cricket World Cup was one thing, but to flood the occasion with talent, optimism and courage was quite another.

By the end of that ten wicket win, with the Mosca brothers accelerating over the finish line with a combined haul of nine sixes in 76 balls, Italy were playing with a freedom and focus that England simply haven’t been able to locate since the Ashes went south in December.

Twenty-four hours earlier, England themselves had slipped to a meek defeat against West Indies, after which Brook declared his batters had been “too careful” . But as he’s been demonstrating all winter long – including with his impetuous dismissal against Scotland – that boundary between aggression and recklessness remains hard for the skipper and his team to locate.

What an irony it would be, then, if Italy’s willingness to “run towards the danger” proves their best means to close the gap on their illustrious opponents. On paper, it is clearly not a fair contest, and a big-game performance from one of England’s big guns could yet leave us wondering what all the fuss has been about: between Phil Salt, Jos Buttler and Brook himself, there are at least three batters who have yet to produce the statement performance that we all know lurks within them.

It certainly shouldn’t require the sort of lion-hearted, backs-to-the-wall qualification bid that has come to epitomise England’s football World Cup clashes with Italy. If Brook emerges in a bloodied headband, Paul Ince-style, to grind his team to their target, they might as well pack their bags and call it quits now. But so much of England’s long winter campaign has been played in the head. Right now, they seem a little stuck inside their own thoughts.

Whether it’s symptom or cause remains to be seen, but Jos Butter’s displays so far in this tournament have been rather anodyne. His first two innings, against Nepal and West Indies, produced a pair of 20s that ended at precisely the moment that he usually seizes control, and though he reached 4000 T20I runs against Scotland, he didn’t get past the second over. At the age of 35, this may be his last realistic chance to drive England deep into a World Cup campaign. The good news is that he should have plenty time left in the tournament to find his best form. The bad news for England will come if he can’t locate it.

High-quality legspin has been a vital weapon in the tournament to date, and no player was more important to Italy’s stunning win over Nepal than their own such weapon, Crishan Kalugamage.  His figures of 3 for 18 not only ripped the heart out of Nepal’s batting, they came just days after England’s mighty Adil Rashid had been beasted by the same opponents at a rate of 14 an over, on one of the worst days out of his 17-year career. In a game where his team have nothing to lose, but against opponents whose anxieties against spin have been a defining feature of their performances, the stage is his to give it a rip and see what happens.

Despite their nervy displays so far, England’s team remains broadly settled. Jamie Overton for Luke Wood has been their only change to date, and Overton’s form suggests he’ll continue. The reserves – Wood, Josh Tongue, Ben Duckett and Rehan Ahmed – were the only players to attend optional training on Sunday.

England: (probable) Phil Salt,  Jos Buttler (wk),  Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton,  Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson,  Jamie Overton,  Jofra Archer,  Adil Rashid

Harry Manenti’s first outing as captain, in the wake Wayne Madsen’s shoulder dislocation, could not have gone more swimmingly against Nepal. With Madsen still hors de combat, he will lead his team once more.

Italy: (probable)  Anthony Mosca,  Justin Mosca, JJ Smuts,  Marcus Campopiano,  Harry Manenti (capt),  Ben Manenti,  Grant Stewart,  Gian-Piero Meade (wk),  Jaspreet Singh,  Crishan Kalugamage,  Ali Hasan

[Cricinfo]

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Winless Afghanistan look to keep slim hopes alive against upbeat UAE

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Afghanistan are still looking for their first win in the tournament [Cricinfo]

How do you lift yourself after a soul-crushing defeat? Because Afghanistan need to do exactly that after going down to South Africa in the double Super Over in Ahmedabad. It was their second defeat in as many games, and even though they are the favourites for their remaining two group games – against UAE and Canada – their T20 World Cup campaign is hanging by the thinnest thread of hope.

Afghanistan have an 11-3 win-loss record against UAE, their opponents for Monday’s day game in Delhi. But a New Zealand win over Canada the following day is enough to knock them out.

UAE must be feeling confident after their win over Canada. It came in Delhi, where they play their remaining two group games as well. But they too rely heavily on Canada beating New Zealand. If New Zealand beat Canada, which is more likely, UAE will have to pull off a series of miracles. They will have to beat Afghanistan and then South Africa, who have been unbeaten so far. And they will have to do so by such margins that their net run rate goes above New Zealand’s. That gap, at the moment, is huge.

So, how do Afghanistan and UAE proceed? Perhaps, as players often say, by taking one game at a time.

Ibrahim Zadran is a perfect foil for the attacking Rahmanullah Gurbaz. While the role of the anchor in T20 cricket is diminishing every second, things are different at T20 World Cups. Moreover, Zadran has upped his intent of late. Two of his four 50-plus scores since October came at a strike rate of more than 150. However, he has managed only 22 runs off as many balls in two outings so far. Afghanistan expect much more from him.

Born in Bihar, graduated from Jamia Millia Islamia and now playing for UAE, Sohaib Khan showed against Canada how destructive he can be. His 29-ball 51, laden with four fours and four sixes, turned UAE’s fortunes around. But this was not the first time his hitting prowesses were on display. At the Rising Stars Asia Cup in November, he had smashed 63 off41 balls against India A in Doha. In that game, he had taken 24 runs off eight balls against Suyash Sharma. Can he repeat those heroics on Monday?

Both teams are likely to go with unchanged XIs.

Afghanistan (probable):  Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk),  Ibrahim Zadran,  Gulbadin Naib,  Sediqullah Atal,  Darwish Rasooli,  Azmatullah Omarzai, Mohammad Nabi,  Rashid Khan (capt),  Mujeeb Ur Rahman,  Noor Ahmad,  Fazalhaq Farooqi

UAE (probable):  Aryansh Sharma (wk),  Muhammad Waseem (capt),  Alishan Sharafu,  Mayank Kumar,  Harshit Kaushik,  Sohaib Khan,  Muhammad Arfan,  Muhammad Farooq,  Haider Ali,  Junaid Siddique,  Muhammad Jawadullah

[Cricinfo]

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