Sports
Dharmaraja Cricket Foundation felicitates seven stalwarts at annual Awards Night
Three present First XI players and four team officials were felicitated by the Dharmaraja College Cricket Foundation (DRCCF) at its annual Cricket Night and Awards Ceremony for the 2023/2024 season held on the 25th of January at the Grand Kandyan Hotel in Kandy. The event, which coincided with the 25th anniversary celebrations of DRCCF saw the presence of over 200 past cricketers of Dharmaraja College joining hands.
The annual Cricket Night and Awards Ceremony conducted by DRCCF, an event highly anticipated among the former cricketing alumni of Dharmaraja College, recognised the achievements of their three Under-19 talents, who represented Sri Lanka Youth in 2024. They were Pulindu Perera, Lakvin Abeysinghe and Sheshan Marasinghe, who have been outstanding contributors to Dharmaraja cricket, as well as the teams they represented at different levels.
Pulindu Perera, a fifth-year player who bats Left-handed and bowls right-arm off-spins, has been awarded the best batsman award in the 34th and 35th editions of the Limited Overs encounters against big match rivals Kingswood College. He also was adjudged the best batsman at the 115th Battle of the Maroons against Kingswood, and was adjudged the best bowler in the 116th edition of the two-day encounter.
Pulindu went onto represent Sri Lanka U-19s against West Indies, Pakistan, England, as well as the Youth Asia Cup and the ICC U19 Cricket World Cup in 2024. His achievements earned him the promotion to compete in the National Super League, the Lanka Premier League and a slot in the Sri Lanka ‘A’ team against Pakistan Shaheens.
Lakvin Abeysinghe was a member of the Sri Lanka Under-19s in the Youth Asia Cup 2024 held in Dubai, where he scored 50 against Nepal and 69 against India. He was adjudged the best batsman in the U-19 Division I Tier ‘B’ segment, and also has gone the extent of playing four times in the Super Provincial Tournament, representing Under-17 and Under-19 teams since 2022.
Shehan Marasinghe, who has many accolades under his belt, has represented the Kandy District team in the SLC Super Provincial Youth League at Under-17 and Under-19 levels. A fast bowler who could hit the above 130 kilometres per hour range, Shehan represented Sri Lanka Under-19s against their tour of England.
The four officials felicitated by the DRCCF were Ananda Wijajasekara, Rienzie Subasinghe, Senaka Dissanayake and Haresh Ratnayake, who contributed to the growth and success of Dharmaraja cricket in different capacities.
Wijayasekara, an experienced cricket coach who imparted his services as a coach at different age groups since 1994, has helped Dharmaraja produce many cricketers at national level, including the school’s recent star, Chamara Kapugedara. Under him Dharmaraja was able to win many titles.
Subasinghe, a well-qualified public servant, has been actively involved with Dharmaraja cricket as the Master in-Charge since he joined the Hill Capital school as an English teacher in 1987. He has worked alongside many coaches of Dharmaraja cricket including David Karunaratne, Sonny Yatawara and Senaka Dissanayake, and has guided many Rajan cricketers reach the highest level.
Celebrated cricketer from the Hill Capital, Dissanayake, has contributed his yeoman services to the recent successes of Dharmaraja cricket. Being a well recognised cricketer himself, Dissanayake has represented his alma mater, at all age levels beginning from Under-13, and also represented Sri Lanka Under-19s under the legendary Aravinda de Silva against Australia in 1984. The first Rajan cricketer to score 200 runs for his school team at the iconic Asgiriya Ground, Dissanayake has served Dharmaraja First XI cricket as a coach from 1984 to 1992 while serving as Head Coach of the team from 2005 to 2017 and a second tenure from 2023 to date.
Considered as a cricketing legend among the Rajans, Ratnayake’s achievements as a former player and captain of Dharmaraja cricket speaks greater volume. Ratnayake, who captained the Dharmaraja First XI team in the 2001/02 season, has many accolades under his belt, such as an impressive batting average of 94.5.
His talent earned him the national spotlight from the category of Under-15, where he was picked to represent the Sri Lanka Development Squad. A former skipper of Dharmaraja U-15 and U-17 teams as well, Ratnayake led the Kandy District and Central Province teams at Under-17 and Under-19 levels, before earning Sri Lanka Schools Colours. He has played for different teams, home and abroad, and has been an inspiration to the young cricketers of Dharmaraja College for many years.
The Dharmaraja College Cricket Foundation, who recognised these seven individuals for their outstanding contributions at different capacities, as players, coaches and officials, also pledged to continue their enduring commitment towards the development of the school’s cricket future. The event was held under the patronage of the Immediate Past Principal of the school as well as the Past Presidents of the DRCCF.
Sports
Eran takes guard as Interim Committee takes charge
Smooth transition of power in Sri Lanka Cricket are about as rare as a tailender’s century and history offers precious little comfort. When Ana Punchihewa was bundled out just days after the 1996 World Cup triumph, the game’s corridors of power stooped to all kinds of underhand work. Four years later, strongmen stood guard at Maitland Place as the tussle between Thilanga Sumathipala and Clifford Ratwatte boiled over, forcing the State to step in and send special forces.
Fast forward to 2023 and Shammi Silva turned to the courts like a batter reviewing a dubious LBW, armed with the sharpest legal minds from Hulftsdorp, to overturn his ouster. Most Presidents counsel that you see on a Tuesdays at St. Anthony’s shrine were seated next to
Shammi that day. But this time, there was no last-ditch appeal, no gloves-off scrap. Shammi and his committee walked off quietly, no fuss, no fireworks, leaving the field without contest.
Whispers suggest this was no accident. A carefully crafted innings, some say, with every loose end tied up and no room for late drama. Sri Lanka Cricket confirmed via a media release that its President and Executive Committee had stepped down yesterday. The Sports Ministry, quick to raise the flag, accepted the resignations and took the game under its wing. By stumps, Eran Wickramaratne had been handed the captaincy as Chairman of the Interim Committee.
A product of Royal College Colombo, he later traded bat for balance sheets, serving as CEO of Nations Trust Bank for nearly a decade before entering Parliament via the UNP National List in 2010. When he faced the electorate in Colombo, he didn’t just scrape through, he was hugely popular, polling over 82,000 votes. A former Deputy Finance Minister, he now steps into cricket’s hot seat with the nation desperate for reversal of fortunes.
The supporting cast reads like a well-balanced XI. Roshan Mahanama, Sidath Wettimuny and Kumar Sangakkara bring pedigree and poise, while names like Thushira Radella, Avanthi Colombage, Prakash Schaffter, Upul Kumarapperuma and Dinal Philips add administrative nous and experience.
Interim Committees, of course, are not new to Sri Lanka’s cricketing playbook. When the board hit rock bottom after the 1999 World Cup debacle, President Chandrika Kumaratunga stepped in, removing Sumathipala and handing the reins to banker Rienzie Wijetilleke. It proved a masterstroke. Wijetilleke played to his strengths, tightening the screws on finances while surrounding himself with sharp cricketing minds; Michael Tissera, Wettimuny, S. Skandakumar, Ashantha de Mel and Kushil Gunasekara. Within a year, Sri Lanka were back punching above their weight, toppling heavyweights like India, Australia, England and South Africa.
Another reset followed in 2002, with Vijaya Malalasekera at the helm. The team responded with a record 10-Test winning streak, a purple patch that still stands tall in the record books. A third committee under Hemaka Amarasuriya kept the ship steady, steering Sri Lanka to a World Cup semi-final.
But when Mahinda Rajapaksa took charge of the country, the template changed. Interim Committees became less about merit and more about manoeuvre, offering a backdoor entry for those who had lost at the ballot. Mahinda always took care of friends and family. As a result, lines between cricket and politics blurred and the game often paid the price with Mahinda’s sons winning the lucrative television rights.
There was a brief return to cricketing sanity in 2015 when Naveen Dissanayake brought in Wettimuny, but that innings was cut short and politics once again tightened its grip.
Now, the latest committee arrives with a promise; less politics, more purpose. Whether that holds will depend on how they play the conditions. The tenure, the roadmap and the ability to clean up a system long mired in off-field drama remain the real tests.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Imesha Dulani and Harshitha Samarawickrama set up Sri Lanka’s victory in T20I series opener
Half-centuries from Harshitha Samarawickrama and Imesha Dulani propelled Sri Lanka to a 25-run win in the first T20I against Bangladesh. The home side’s batting woes continued as they failed to chase down 162 against an efficient bowling effort by the visitors in Sylhet.
Malki Madara, Mithali Ayodhya and captain Chamari Athapaththu picked up two wickets each as Sri Lanka restricted Bangladesh to 136 for 7 in the chase. Athapaththu was outstanding with her accuracy, conceding just 19 runs in her four overs for the two wickets. Bangladesh had been put in early trouble when they slipped to 44 for 4 in the sixth over, despite starting off rapidly with 39 for no loss in the first 3.3 overs.
Shorna Akter then struck 60 off 45 balls, with six boundaries including two sixes, but her knock was for a losing cause. There was no help from batters at the other end. Shorna stuck around even as Bangladesh kept losing wickets and was the last batter dismissed off the final ball of the innings.
Earlier, Sri Lanka were powered by Athapaththu, who cracked five boundaries and a six in her 32. After her dismissal in the tenth over, Dulani and Samarawickrama added 80 runs for the third wicket. Samarawickrama struck five fours and two sixes in her 61 off 35 balls, while Dulani slammed seven fours in her 55 off 40 balls.
Their approach derailed Bangladesh’s bowlers, with only offspinner Sultana Khatun putting in an impressive bowling display: she took 2 for 29. The remaining two T20Is in the series will also be held in Sylhet.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka Women 161 for 4 in 20 overs
(Chamari Athapaththu 32, Imesha Dulani 55, Harshitha Samarawickrama 61; Marufa Akter 1-37, Sultana Khatun 2-29, Nahida Akter 1-26) beat Bangladesh Women 136 for 7 in 20 overs (Dilara Akter 23, Juairiya Ferdous 16, Shobhana Mostary 16, Shorna Akter 60; Malki Madara 2-31, Mithali Ayodhya 2-34, Chamari Athapaththu 2-19) by 25 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Stafford Motors power MCA G Division for 15th consecutive year
Stafford Motor Company Pvt Limited will power the Meecantile Cricket Association G Divison League Cricket Tournament for the 15th consecutive year.
This year the tournament is being played in the T20 format and 44 teams are in the fray to claim the Honda Trophy.
Stafford Motors’ General Manager Motorcycle Sales and Power Tools Kapila Gunathilake handed over the sponsorship to MCA President Sirosha Gunathilake and Chairman of MCA’s Sponsorship Committee K D S Kanishka at a ceremony held at MCA’s Legends Wing on Tuesday evening.
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