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New Zealand under 85kg rugby team set for historic tour of Sri Lanka

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New Zealand rugby team will feature in two games in Sri Lanka next month

Sri Lanka Rugby announced the historic visit of the New Zealand Under 85kg national team to Sri Lanka next month for two highly anticipated matches against the Sri Lankan team.

This landmark tour comes in response to an invitation extended by SLR early last year. The two-match series will see the sides face off on May 4, at the Nittawela Rugby Stadium in Kandy, and again on May 10, at the Race Course Grounds in Colombo.

While Sri Lanka may not boast the same storied rugby tradition as New Zealand, the island nation shares a special connection with the All Blacks through Sir Colin Meads. Widely regarded as one of the greatest rugby players of all time, Meads played his first game in the famous black jersey in then Ceylon in mid 1950s, as part of the NZ Colts side. That link adds a nostalgic touch to this exciting tour.

The matches promise to offer Sri Lankan players a rare and invaluable opportunity to challenge themselves against a technically sound and tactically astute side from New Zealand—arguably the world’s most celebrated rugby nation.

Crucially, the tour will also contribute to the continued development of the sport in Sri Lanka. Exposure to high-level competition is expected to equip local players with insights into advanced strategies, gameplay structure, and professionalism.

The Sri Lanka Tuskers will field an open-weight team, with one key restriction: all prop forwards must weigh under 105kg.

Notably, the Under 85kg rugby division is not currently played anywhere in Asia, making this event a groundbreaking initiative for the region. Despite their weight classification, the New Zealand side is expected to deliver a high standard of rugby, with their trademark skill and tactical sharpness on full display.

The Tuskers head into this series in strong form, having clinched the Asia Rugby Division 1 title in 2024. Their packed schedule continues in April 2025 with a crucial promotion-relegation match against Malaysia, which will determine whether Sri Lanka ascends to Asia’s top tier.

The New Zealand Under 85kg team, officially launched in 2024, represents a significant step in the development of weight-grade rugby globally. Initial discussions with a national union about a 2025 overseas tour have now materialized into this exciting visit to Sri Lanka.

Live coverage of both matches will be available on Dialog Television – ThePapare TV HD (Channel 126), as well as online via ThePapare.com and the Dialog ViU App.



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Nethul rises to the occation as Ananda dominate day one

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Nethul Edirimanne

96TH BATTLE OF THE MAROONS

Open bat Nethul Edirimanne rose to the big occasion wth an unbeaten century as Ananda College posted 325 for five wickets at stumps on day one of the 96th Battle of the Maroons Big Match at the SSC ground on Friday.

‎Decidng to bat first, Ananda found Edirimanne holding their top order together as he built up useful partnerships in each session.

‎Edirimanne had just a single half century against his name this season and Ananda’s entire batting line up had just two centuries. Edirimanne batted through to the close of play and remained unbeaten on 150.

‎It was not only his highest score but also the highest score by an Anandian.

‎He had faced 254 balls by stumps and had stroked 14 fours and a six in his knock.

‎The days highest partnership -126 runs for the fifth wicket- was put on by Edirimanne and Ovin Perera who scored 53 runs before being given out lbw to Dunitha Anusara.

‎Perera scored six fours.

‎While Danindu Sellapperuma (33) and Sharada Jayaratne (37) contributed with 30s, Himira Kudagama made 24. Skipper Kithma Widanapathirana’s dismissal for two runs was the only dissapointment for Ananda on an otherwise fruiful opening day.

‎For Nalanda Osanda Pamuditha took two wickets.

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England outmuscle New Zealand in nervy game and keep Pakistan alive

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Will Jacks and Rehan Ahmed took England home [Cricinfo]

Will Jacks rode the confidence he has gleaned from a breakthrough global tournament, while Rehan Ahmed landed feet-first in the competition with a crucial display of youthful bravado, as England found the gumption to outmuscle New Zealand in a gripping, spin-dominant encounter in Colombo, to march into the semi-finals with their first real statement win of the campaign.

It was a dead rubber from England’s perspective, but it was anything but for New Zealand. They remain odds-on to reach the last four unless Pakistan can pull off a massive win over Sri Lanka in their own group finale on Saturday night. But this was their chance to progress on their own terms, and when England had slumped to 117 for 6 at the end of the 17th over, with Jos Buttler’s crisis tournament hitting a new nadir, a target of 43 from 18 seemed outlandish to say the least.

The winning boundary came via Jacks’ grille with three balls to spare, and was greeted with a shrug of the shoulders as he prepared to claim his fourth Match award of the campaign, but the decisive onslaught had come two overs earlier, in Glenn Phillips’ fourth and final burst of a compelling all-round game.

Phillips had previously chipped in with the day’s most imposing knock, 39 from 28 in New Zealand’s hard-grafting innings of 159 for 7, and if his first-ball dismissal of a rampant Harry Brook hadn’t been the decisive blow of the chase, then his stunning diving catch at deep midwicket off Jacob Bethell, to leave England 58 for 4 in the ninth over, seemed to have wrecked any remaining hopes.

But, after Tom Banton’s 33 from 24 had kept England afloat through the middle overs, Jacks and Rehan combined to rampage through the finish line. Rehan, making his tournament debut in place of Jamie Overton, crashed Phillips over long-on for six before Jacks launched him over midwicket, then closed out a 22-run over with back-to-back fours.

Rehan then greeted Mitchell Santner, hitherto so frugal for New Zealand, with an exceptional reverse-sweep for four more, and when he charged down the track to his final ball with a gung-ho swing for a second six over long-off, the requirement had been obliterated to five from the final six.

England’s latest power failure

The winning hit came off Matt Henry, in his final involvement before flying home for paternity leave, and what a hole he will leave at the top of New Zealand’s bowling card. He has spent the past few winters making mincemeat of Zak Crawley’s figures across formats, and today he scarcely needed to deviate from his tried-and-tested to leave England’s run-chase in the mire.

Phil Salt had no answer to Henry’s each-way movement from a full, zippy length: a big first-ball inducker induced the nervy poke that got him off the mark through deep third, and set up the knockout punch. A wonderful bat’s-width seamer, shaping in on off and zipping away, to snick the edge through to Seifert.

Salt had been one half of England’s proudest asset coming into this tournament. Buttler had been the other, but what is there left to say about his ghastly state of mind as a run of 15 runs in five innings culminated in a second-ball duck? In mitigation, Lockie Ferguson’s hard lines might have done for many a batter, as he found good lift from back of a length to wreck Buttler’s attempts to be proactive.

At 2 for 2 after eight balls, the chase seemed dead before it had begun. Brook, however, relishes such opportunities to throw caution to the wind, and risk utter calamity for a shot at a reboot. In his new berth at No.3, he opened with an air shot to close out Henry’s opening over, and was all at sea for the start of his second. So Brook, naturally, galloped down the pitch once more to slam his first boundary through long-off, then knelt into a simply outrageous scooped six that smashed the LED screens in the square-leg scoreboard.

It was too good to last, but in the wake of his solo century against Pakistan, it was another front-running example of the bravery that Brook has repeatedly demanded throughout this stuttering campaign. Rachin Ravindra’s mid-innings haul of 3 for 19 in four overs suggests that there’s still a cloying degree of reticence to do away with. By the back end of the same innings, Jacks and Rehan had served up evidence that his team are actually primed to answer the call.

Powerplay predictability

While England in general have struggled to get themselves going, Jofra Archer has been hiding in plain sight at the top of the bowling card: habitually hitting the high 140kphs, while easing into a rhythm that has now justified three powerplay overs in every innings since the win over Scotland, five games ago.

Today, he opened the match with a 124kph slower ball to Tim Seifert, but that was the only respite he was willing to offer in a breathlessly aggressive introduction. Seifert danced at the crease for the rest of his maiden over, but could barely lay bat on ball (fortunately so, given the successfully reviewed caught-behind that spared him a five-ball duck).

The only dent in Archer’s first two overs came when Finn Allen connected with a slower ball (the last he would bowl) and the temptation to stick to the formula was overwhelming. Not for the first time, Brook slipped into predictability with his bowling options, and Seifert was waiting to cash in for Archer’s third over: anchored on the back foot, anticipating the heat, and carving two fours and a six over midwicket. By the time Sam Curran’s slower ball had also been launched over long-on, New Zealand had marched to 54 for 0 in the powerplay, and that impact up top had been wasted.

Spin for the squeeze

Archer aside, Brook’s faith in his spinners has been unwavering, and for the rest of the innings it was amply justified. Until he took over as captain, England had never bowled more than 11 overs of spin in any T20I. Now, they have bowled 11-plus in seven different matches on Brook’s watch, including this new record, 16, breaking their previous high of 15.3 set in Pallekele earlier this month.

From Adil Rashid in the seventh to Rehan in the 20th, England did not even countenance a return to their seamers, as New Zealand’s under-functioning middle-order endured another gruelling day.

Rashid struck first, moments after being slog-swept for six over deep midwicket. His next ball was tossed up fuller, straighter, slower … and Seifert galloped past his swish for Buttler to pull off a neat stumping. And, with that early evidence that the ball was sticking and climbing off the surface, Jacks’ leaping lollipops were the obvious go-to. He may look hittable but he gives it a rip, and Allen duly pinged his fourth ball straight to deep midwicket.

Brief scores:
England 161 for 6 in 19.3 overs  (Harry Brook 26, Jacob Bethell 21, Tom Banton 33, Sam Curran 24, Will Jacks 32*, Rehan Ahmed 19*; Matt Henry 1-19, Lockie Ferguson 1-14, Glenn Phillips 1-43,  Rachin Ravindra 3-19) beat New Zealand 159 for 7 in 20 overs (Glenn Phillips 39, Tim Seifert 35, Finn Allen 29, Rachin Ravindra 11, Mark Chapman 15, Cole McConchie 14; Liam Dawson 1-32, Adil Rashid 2-28, Will Jacks 2-23, Rehan Ahmed 2-28) by four wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Madushani, Sumedha among athletes to reach qualifying standards

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Madushani Herath

by Reemus Fernando 

‎Long jumper Madushani Herath and former national javelin record holder Sumedha Ranasinghe were among half a dozen athletes to have reached qualifying standads to make the national pool on day one of the Athletic Trials held at Diyagama today.

‎Former Nannapurawa MV, Bibila athlete Herath cleared a distance of 6.32 metres to win the long jump contest, some 18 centimeters clear of the target set for the first trial.

‎Distance runner Rasara Wijesuriya was more than one minute faster than the qualifying standard set for the 10,000 metres as she stopped the clock in 34:03.29 minutes. Her closest rival Nayana Sewwandi finished more than two minutes later.

‎Olympian Sumedha Ranasinghe cleared 75.50 meters (qualifying mark -75.00m) and was joined by R. Rathusan in that club with a distance of 75.36.

‎Minoli Fernando in the women’s high jump (1.76 m) and K.T. Mathumeethan in the men’s hammer throw (50.42m) were among the other athletes to make an impact reaching qualifying standars.

‎The selection trial is held with the aim of forming a national pool for this year’s Asian Games and the Commonwealth Games.

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