Sports
A historic day for Ceylon

Duncan White, Lakshman Kadirgamar, Sharm Mustafa and Oscar Wijesinghe are seen in this picture which appeared in The Ceylon Daily News decades ago. Duncan White, Lakshman Kadirgamar, Oscar Wijesinghe and M.A.M. Sherrif represented the four communities when they brought four scrolls to the Independence Square to be handed over to the Prime Minister D.S. Senanayake to be read for the public to hear.
After 400 years of Western domination Ceylon as Sri Lanka was known gained Independence on the 4th of February 1948. Heralding the occasion four athletes from the four corners of the Island brought four scrolls to the Independence square to be handed over to the Prime Minister D.S. Senanayake to be read for the public to hear.
The four reputed athletes represented the four communities. They were Oscar Wijesinghe (Sinhalese), Lakshman Kadirgamar (Tamil), Mohamed A Sherrif (Muslim) and Duncan White (Burgher). Arriving at the Independence Square they handed over the scrolls to young females representing the four communities. Swarna Amarasuriya (Sinhalese), Srimani Ramachandran (Tamil), Ayesha Zally (Muslim) and Phyllis de Kretser (Burgher). In turn the four damsels handed over the scrolls to the Prime Minister who read them over the public address system.
It was indeed a happy coincidence that in the very same year Sri Lanka made her debut at the greatest sporting spectacle in the world, as an independent nation. A team comprising of three athletes and three boxers represented the country at the XIV Olympic Games in London 1948. No one ever dreamt that any of the participants would ever win a medal at the greatest sports festival after the Second World War. In the final of the 400m Hurdles event Duncan White of Sri Lanka though beaten by Roy Chocran, USA to second place lowered the existing Olympic record skimming over the hurdles in 51.8 secs. Thus getting the first medal to Independent Sri Lanka at an international sporting event. Commenting on the breath taking performance, the President of the Sri Lanka Olympic Association said that “White has done more for Sri Lanka in 51.8secs than all the propaganda over 100 years”. This athlete was none other than one of the athletes who brought the scroll to the Independence Square on 4th February 1948.
Duncan White proved that his performance at the London Olympics was not a flash in the pan at the British Empire Games in Auckland New Zealand in 1950 (now known as the Commonwealth Games). His noteworthy performance of 52.5secs not only won the gold medal and the Empire Games record, but was just outside the world record for the event by one fifth of a second.
Subsequently the other three athletes too performed well for the country. Oscar Wijesinghe and M.A.M. Sherrif represented the country at the British Empire Games along with Duncan White. Oscar Wijesinghe a Public Schools athlete, representing the University of Ceylon won the 100m at the All India and Ceylon Inter University Championships. He established a Sri Lanka record in the 100m in 11.0 seconds in 1949 (The writer too equalled this record in 1955).
Lakshman Kadirgamar won the 110m Hurdles event at the Public Schools Meet and later won the Nationals in 1951. At the All India and Ceylon Inter University Athletic Meet too he won the above event.
He finally became the Foreign Ministers of Sri Lanka.
K.L.F. Wijedasa
Sports
St. Benedict’s likely to get new life at top Tier

Promotions and Demotions of Under 19 Cricket tournament
by Reemus Fernando
The future of Mahanama College Colombo in the Under 19 Cricket tournament will be decided by Sri Lanka Schools Cricket Association shortly, after the school serving a suspension from the ongoing tournament failed to move the courts against the sports governing body.
Mahanama pulled out from the quarter-final against Trinity on the second day of the match aledging that the ground staff had prepared the wicket earlier than the scheduled time preventing the bowling side (Mahanama) from taking advantage of the conditions in the morning. In response, SLSCA barred Mahanama from the entire tournament.
A senior official of the SLSCA said that the executive committee of the association will soon take a decision regarding the future of Mahanama College. On previous occasions schools violating tournament rules were severely dealt with, imposing bans and demoting teams to lower divisions.
In the case of Mahanama getting demoted, St. Benedict’s will hae a new life in the Tier ‘A’ tournament. At the end of the relegation matches, Maliyadewa College Kurunegala and St. Benedict’s College, Kotahena were the lowest placed teams and are slated to be demoted to Tier ‘B’.
In Tier ‘B’, Holy Cross College Kalutara and Tissa Central Kalutara are the teams getting demoted as they ended up with the lowest points after the relegation league. A surprising outright victory by St. Sylvester’s against Tissa in the relegation matches secured the Tier B place of the Kandy team.
Their places in the top Division will be filled by St. Joseph Vaz’s College, Wennappuwa and Dharmaloka College Kelaniya who were the finalists of the Division II Tier ‘A’ tournament.
The former Division I team Kingswood College and Vidyaloka College Galle are the teams getting promoted to Tier ‘A’ after doing well in the Tier ‘B’ of the Division II tournament.
The teams advancing to Division II from the top Tier of the Division III tournament are Sri Sumangala College Hikkaduwa and St. Mary’s College Chilaw.
The other teams getting demoted to lower divisions are Galahitiyawa Central and St. Peter’s Negombo (from Division II Tier ‘A’) and Siri Piyarathana, Padukka and St. Mary’s Kegalle (from Division II Tier ‘B’).
Karunaratne Buddhist School and Wanduraba Central are demoted from Tier ‘A’ of the Division III tournament for not honouring their tournament commitments.
Sports
St. Aloysius’ book Tier ‘B’ final spot

St. Aloysius’ College Galle registered a crushing 76 runs victory over Isipatana in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘B’ limited overs tournament semi-final played at Surrey Village ground on Wednesday.
Latest News
Mandhana, Wareham, Rana breach Brabourne fortress to deny Mumbai Indians top spot

First-season champions Mumbai Indians (MI) finished the league stage second behind Delhi Capitals for the third year in a row, after failing to chase down 200 against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) at Brabourne Stadium. Needing a win to top the table and seal a direct final berth, MI put on a shoddy fielding display that gave RCB a competitive total. In their reply Nat Sciver-Brunt was the only batter to cross 23 as the hosts fell to their first loss at Brabourne in six games.
RCB’s 11-run win was the third victory in a row for the team batting first at WPL 2025 after the early trend was heavily in favour of teams chasing. Their win that helped them off the bottom of the table was set up by a half-century from Smriti Mandhana, free-flowing strokeplay from S Meghana. Ellyse Perry’s anchoring role, and boundary-laden cameos from Richa Ghosh and Georgia Wareham.
For MI, Sciver-Brunt did the heavy lifting after the losses of Hayley Matthews and Harmanpreet Kaur, but once she fell for a stunning 69 off 35 in the 15th over, MI had too much to score (71 runs) in too little time (31 balls) with no big names to follow.
With nothing to lose in this campaign, RCB came out all guns blazing in their last game and they did it audaciously by targeting MI’s best bowlers. Meghana clubbed Sciver-Brunt for two fours in the second over before seeing Mandhana end the third over with a four followed by a glorious straight six against Shabnim Ismail. Meghana then welcomed Matthews with 4, 6 and 4 but Matthews’ riposte came in the form of a 102.8kmh bouncer which she top-edged to short fine leg for 26 off 13.
RCB finished the powerplay on 53 for 1, and Perry made MI pay for gifting her three lives. The next bowler to be carted all around was Amelia Kerr. Once her first ball – a long hop – was pulled for four by Perry, Mandhana swept her for six, flicked for four and swung her down the ground for a 22-run over. Briefly after MI pulled the run rate down from 9.62 to under 8.50 an over, Mandhana collected two consecutive aerial fours to reach her fifty off 35 balls.
Kerr’s second over was even more dramatic. She gave Perry a life on 16 when she failed to hold on to the ball that was smashed back to her. Two balls later, Mandhana, on 52, skied a sweep but Sanskriti Gupta put down a sitter at midwicket. That didn’t cost MI much as Mandhana found long-off on her next ball.
What did cost MI was Perry’s life. She gloriously lofted Ismail for a six next over and drilled Parunika Sisodia for four after Ghosh had already collected two fours in the 14th over. Ghosh was also living dangerously. She miscued a couple of swings before tearing Ismail apart. A reverse-scoop edged for four, a mighty straight six and a scoop right over the keeper fetched 15 from the over to give Ismail figures of 0 for 41. Ghosh miscued Matthews for 36 off 22 next over but Perry and Wareham piled on more boundaries.
The duo went after Amanjot Kaur – whose tight lines saw her concede just nine off her first three overs – for four fours all around, which included the reliable Sciver-Brunt putting down a dolly at deep midwicket after being distracted by the spidercam. Perry was dropped on the first ball of the last over, bowled by Kerr, that went for four. Wareham swept and reverse-swept Kerr for 4, 2, 4 and 6 to give RCB 199 with her scintillating 31 not out off 10 that helped them collect 65 off the last four.
MI’s opening woes continued as Kerr again failed to put on a decent score. While Matthews got going with spectacular hits off Perry, Kerr faced just nine balls in the first 30. Sneh Rana snared the two openers in consecutive overs when she had Matthews hole out to deep square leg and Kerr sky one towards cover for 9.
MI needed a big lift from 45 for 2 in the powerplay. Harmanpreet survived an lbw appeal and review from WPL debutant Heather Graham and found the gaps with two confident boundaries. But Mandhana brought back the wily Kim Garth and she foxed the MI captain with a back-of-the-hand legcutter that drew an edge which was pouched nicely by Ghosh.
Needing 71 to get from 31 from there was a tall ask for MI but their lower order didn’t give up. The charge was led by the hard-hitting Sajeevan Sanjana mainly at the end after the wickets of Yastika Bhatia, Amanjot and G Kamalini. With 44 to win from 12, Sajana packed some power against Garth’s slower ones and then with 24 to get from five, she hammered Perry in the ‘V’ down the ground for two sixes. She missed the next ball and then miscued one to be dismissed for 23 off 12 and MI fell short.
Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women 199 for 3 in 20 overs (Sabbhineni Meghana 26, Smriti Mandhana 53, Ellyse Perry 49*, Richa Ghosh 36, Georgia Wareham 31*; Hayley Matthews 2-37, Amelia Kerr 1-47) beat Mumbai Indians Women 188 for 9 in 20 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 69, Hayley Mathtews 19, Harmanpreet Kaur 20, Amanjot Kaur 17, Sajeevan Sajana 23, Sanskriti Gupta 10; Kim Garth 2-33, Ellyse Perry 2-53, Sneh Rana 3-26, Heather Graham 1-47, Georgia Wareham 1-49) by 11 runs
[Cricinfo]
-
News5 days ago
Private tuition, etc., for O/L students suspended until the end of exam
-
Features6 days ago
Shyam Selvadurai and his exploration of Yasodhara’s story
-
Editorial4 days ago
Ranil roasted in London
-
Latest News5 days ago
S. Thomas’ beat Royal by five wickets in the 146th Battle of the Blues
-
News5 days ago
Teachers’ union calls for action against late-night WhatsApp homework
-
Editorial6 days ago
Heroes and villains
-
Features4 days ago
The JVP insurrection of 1971 as I saw it as GA Ampara
-
Editorial5 days ago
Police looking for their own head