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Rukunayake steadies Trinity after early collapse

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A stubborn knock of 59 runs by Praveen Rukunayake helped Trinity College recover from a disastrous start to post 173 runs against Nalanda College on day one of their Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ quarter-final played at the BOI Ground on Thursday.

‎Trinity suffered an early setback when open batsman Puleesha Thilakarathne and one-drop Mahendra Abeysinghe were dismissed in quick succession with the scoreboard yet to move. The early blows left Trinity struggling, and they continued to lose wickets at regular intervals as Nalanda’s bowlers maintained pressure.

‎With the innings in danger of collapsing completely, number eight batsman Praveen Rukunayake produced a determined effort, compiling a valuable 59 runs. His fighting knock helped Trinity recover from the early damage and guide them to a modest but competitive total of 173.

‎For Nalanda, Malsha Fernando led the bowling attack with an impressive spell, claiming four wickets for 49 runs, while Hasitha Rathnayake provided solid support with three wickets for 38.

‎In reply, Nalanda too found scoring difficult against a disciplined Trinity bowling attack. At the close of play on day one, Nalanda were struggling at 98 for five wickets, leaving the quarter-final finely poised heading into the second day.

‎‎Kumarasiri’s 11-wicket haul sets up thrilling finish

‎‎The Under 19 Division I Tier B cricket quarter-final between Sri Dharmaloka College, Kelaniya and Sri Sumangala College, Panadura was finely balanced after an eventful second day which saw 20 wickets tumble at Kuruvita on Thursday.

‎At stumps, Sri Sumangala were 59 for two wickets chasing a modest target of 156 runs, leaving the Panadura outfit needing fewer than 100 runs with eight wickets in hand when play resumes on the final day.

‎The biggest question heading into the decider will be whether the wicket continues to behave the same way it did on the second day when bowlers dominated proceedings throughout the day.

‎Sri Dharmaloka, who secured a useful first innings lead of 67 runs, failed to capitalise on the advantage as they collapsed dramatically in their second innings. Left-arm spinner Mevindu Kumarasiri produced a match-turning spell claiming six wickets to complete an outstanding match haul of 11 wickets.

‎Kumarasiri received excellent support from Methum Fernando as the pair shared all ten wickets between them while Sri Dharmaloka were bowled out for just 89 runs. Only Tharusha Mihiranga showed some resistance with a top score of 24.

‎Sri Dharmaloka appeared steady after moving past the 50-run mark for the loss of four wickets, but their middle and lower order folded quickly within the space of 14 overs to hand Sri Sumangala a realistic chance of victory.

‎Chasing 156 runs, Sri Sumangala made a confident start despite losing an early wicket. Opener Vidura Basuru played an aggressive knock of 33 runs which included three fours and a six and shared a valuable 41-run stand for the second wicket with Sandeepa Wijeratne.

‎Basuru was eventually dismissed by Koshitha Adithya, leaving Wijeratne unbeaten on 17 at the close of play with the match delicately poised.

‎Earlier in the day, Sri Dharmaloka’s bowlers staged a strong fightback to dismiss Sri Sumangala for 144 runs in reply to their first innings total of 211.

‎Tishan Nipun led the attack with impressive figures of 4 for 43 while Sathindu Praboda provided strong support with 3 for 44 as the pair shared seven wickets between them. Koshitha Adithya (2/27) and Mewan Randeepana picked up the remaining wickets.

‎With Sri Sumangala needing under 100 runs and Sri Dharmaloka requiring eight wickets, an exciting finish is on the cards when the teams return for the final day. (RF)



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Senuja, Hettiarachchi frustrate Sri Sumangala as Wesley seize control

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A determined unbroken sixth-wicket stand between Lithum Senuja and Kavindu Hettiarachchi powered Wesley into a commanding position on day two of the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘B’ final at the Surrey Village Ground, Maggona on Sunday.

‎Replying to Sri Sumangala’s first innings total of 239, Wesley reached 281 for 5 at stumps, taking a 42-run lead with five wickets in hand. The highlight of the day was the unbeaten 144-run partnership for the sixth wicket, with Senuja crafting a patient 55 not out off 155 deliveries, while Hettiarachchi played the more assertive role with an unbeaten 82 off 113 balls.

‎Earlier in the innings, Rasheed Nahyan laid the foundation with a composed 78 off 133 balls, holding the top order together after a steady start. Despite a few middle-order setbacks, Wesley regained control through the resilience and discipline of their lower middle order, batting Sri Sumangala out of the contest in the latter stages of the day.

‎For Sri Sumangala, Mevindu Kumarasiri was the standout performer with the ball, toiling hard for figures of 4 for 125 in a marathon 36-over spell, though he lacked consistent support from the other end as Wesley’s batters dug in.

‎Sri Sumangala’s first innings effort of 239, compiled on day one after electing to bat, was built on patience and partnerships. After slipping to 28 for 2 early on, Vidura Basuru anchored the innings with a resilient 97 off 226 balls. He shared a crucial 72-run stand with Nikesh Iddamalgoda, who counterattacked with a brisk 54 off 58 balls, striking ten boundaries.

‎Basuru then added another valuable 71 runs with Bihanga Silva, who contributed a steady 32 off 102 deliveries, helping consolidate the innings. However, the lack of acceleration in the latter stages meant Sri Sumangala settled for a modest total.

‎Wesley’s bowling effort was led by Jeewahan Sriram, who claimed 3 for 40, while Hettiarachchi (2/37) and Methnula Mayadunna (2/20) provided solid support to restrict Sri Sumangala.

‎With Wesley already in the lead and five wickets intact, they will look to extend their advantage further on day three, while Sri Sumangala must strike early to stay in contention in this closely fought final.

‎Scores:

‎Sri Sumangala – 239 all out in 82.5 overs

‎(Vidura Basuru 97, Nikesh Iddamalgoda 54, Bihanga Silva 32; Jeewahan Sriram 3/40, Kavindu Hettiarachchi 2/37, Methnula Mayadunna 2/20)

‎Wesley – 281/5 in 94 overs

‎(Rasheed Nahyan 78, Lithum Senuja 55 n.o., Kavindu Hettiarachchi 82 n.o.; Mevindu Kumarasiri 4/125)

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Tharanga calls time on Bloomfield tenure

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Bloomfield Cricket Club will soon be without the steady hand that steered their ship through calm and storm, as Tharanga Dammika prepares to call time on his stint as Head Coach at the end of the Major Clubs Premier League season.

After years of unwavering commitment, Tharanga has decided to hang up his boots bringing down the curtain on a six-year spell that left an indelible mark on one of Sri Lanka’s most storied clubs.

The news has sent ripples through the cricketing fraternity, with players past and present tipping their caps to a man who was more than just a coach, a mentor, a tactician and at times, the dressing room’s moral compass.

Over six seasons, he rebuilt, recalibrated and when required, dug in his heels. His tenure was not merely about results on the scoreboard but about shaping cricketers who could go the distance.

He had an eye for talent, nurturing youngsters and backing them to play their natural game. His philosophy was simple, give players the long rope, allow them to evolve and trust the process. In an era of quick fixes, Tharanga chose to play the long game.

Under his stewardship, Bloomfield enjoyed a purple patch. The crowning glory came last season when the club clinched the First Class title, a triumph built on discipline, patience and no small measure of grit. They also finished runners-up in the T20 competition and shared honours in the Under-23 tournament, a testament to the depth he helped build.

But beyond the silverware, it was his man-management that stood out. Tharanga knew when to wind up his troops and when to put an arm around a struggling player. He demanded high standards but never lost sight of the spirit of the game, ensuring that Bloomfield played hard but fair, walking the fine line without overstepping it.

Through good days and bad, he kept the dressing room grounded. When the chips were down, he urged his players to stick to basics, bat time, bowl tight lines and let the game come to them. It was old-school wisdom, delivered with modern clarity.

His exit creates a significant gap. He is more than just a coach as he is the mastermind behind a culture that valued hard work and excellence equally.

by Ramesh Joseph

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Malinga, Reddy sink Chennai Super Kings chase to defend under-par 194 in Hyderabad

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Eshan Malinga's three-for wrecked the CSK chase [BCCI]

Sunrisers Hyderabad pulled a victory out of nowhere thanks to four unheralded bowlers taking the smallest chance given to them. Three of Chennai Super Kings’ own unheralded bowlers might have been their inspiration. In an IPL season full of runs, the oppressed finally became oppressors.

After the first powerplay, ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster had the first innings total reaching 237. Jaamie Overton, Anshul Kamboj and Gurjapneet Singh prevented such nonsense. CSK were given a target of 194 and needed 84 off 60 balls with seven wickets in hand. They should have pulled off their first 190-plus chase in eight years.

But Eshan Malinga (3-29), Nitish Kumar Reddy (2-31), Shivang Kumar (1-18) and Sakib Hussain (1-32) just wouldn’t let them. On paper, there were weak links. On the field, there was none. Each of those four had an economy rate of 8 or lower and each of them picked up at least one wicket. Shivang dismissed Dewald Brevis for 0. Sakib wrecked Shivam Dube’s stumps and killed off all CSK hope. In the end, their contribution to victory was bigger than Abhishek Sharma’s 15-ball fifty and Heinrich Klassen’s 33-ball fifty.

CSK picked Matt Short over Akeal Hosein primarily so they could target Abhishek and Travis Head with offspin. For two overs it worked. They gambled on a third, and it backfired. Abhishek moved from 26 off 10 to 50 off 15 by moving leg side and making the room he needed to free his arms. Short had succeeded because he wasn’t giving any of that, but he couldn’t cope when the batter changed strategies.

Overton is 7 for 86 in the middle overs this season. He is its third-highest wicket-taker in this phase of the innings, and his success comes from his hit-the-deck style of bowling. CSK have also course-corrected a little bit. They threw him into the death overs against Tim David in Bengaluru and he got pulverised. Over the last three matches though, Overton has been given a role more suited to his strengths and he’s responded beautifully. The ball to dismiss Abhishek, minutes after he’d been dropped for 51, was a brute, rearing up at the unsuspecting batter and snagging his edge through to the keeper. Only Prasidh Krishna (7.2), Jofra Archer (11.4) and Prince Yadav (12.1) have a better bowling average than Overton (14.6) when they all go into the wicket.

For three straight IPLs, Klaasen had maintained a strike rate above 170. This time it’s down in the 140s. He is starting slow. He is being more selective with his shots. The upshot of all this caution is three fifties in six innings. Despite this change in his batting, Klaasen remained just as destructive against wristspin as he has always been, surprising Noor Ahmad with a switch hit in the 13th over. Klaasen made 24 of his 59 runs against Noor at a strike rate of 185. The other SRH batters totalled 9 off 11.

In pre-season, CSK really dove into turning Kamboj into a death bowler. They understood it was a gaping hole in their team dynamics. The worst of it was felt in Bengaluru when soon after he dismissed David with a pin-point yorker from around the wicket, it was revealed that he had overstepped. Kamboj nailed the yorker here too and Klaasen dragged it onto his stumps. This time the no-ball did not show up.

SRH ended facing the last 16 balls of their innings without their best source of boundaries. Gurjapneet from the other end alternated between going for the blockhole and getting the back-of-the-hand slower ball to kick up off the pitch. Together, this unlikely duo recorded a nice little high: where all 18 of the last 18 deliveries had to be bowled in IPL 2026, CSK giving just 17 runs slotted in right behind one of the best bowling teams of the tournament, Gujarat Titans’ effort, against Kolkata Knight Riders, when they gave up just 15 runs in overs 18, 19 and 20.

CSK outscored SRH in the powerplay 76 for 3 to 75 for 2, and the reason for it was a man who started the season being bounced out. Ayush Mhatre now has 68 runs against fast bowling at a strike rate of 226.66. He laid waste to Praful Hinge, teaching him not to bowl short with a down-to-up pull shot for six, and leaving him backed against that corner as he drove on the up over the off side again and again. Mhatre hit five boundaries in that over – the third of the innings. He was batting like he’d never heard of a concept called running between the wickets. Ironically enough, that’s what did him in.

Mhatre injured his left leg responding to a quick two from Ruturaj Gaikwad. The physio had to come out twice in two balls. In the dugout, there was heightened tension. Head coach Stephen Fleming couldn’t sit still, while batting coach Mike Hussey looked pensive. From the days of the dad’s army, this team’s fortunes now swing up or down based on an 18-year-old’s output. On Saturday, it swung inexorably down. CSK made 62 for 1 in 4.1 overs. Mhatre pulled up on 4.2. CSK spent the next 8.4 overs barely knowing where their next boundary was coming from. They made 58 runs and lost four wickets.

CSK know what it feels like to be on the wrong side of a Malinga. They lost a title that way. Seven years later, their efforts to put a simple league game out of sight was being blocked by a man with the same name.

Eshan Malinga bounced Gaikwad out. His ability to access the yorker length – or close to it – produced two more wickets. Short (34 off 30) and Sarfaraz Khan (25 off 19) were left ruing how well they had hit those balls, because all their power really did was make sure the ball carried to deep midwicket. At the presentation, Malinga said he was getting reverse swing as well.

Dube continued to struggle in the finisher’s role as CSK’s chase fizzled out. They were running away with the game in the powerplay. They were favourites even at the halfway mark of the chase. Not being able to pull it off is another example of how their flawed mega-auction strategy is still following them.

Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 194 for 9 in 20 overs (Abhishek Sharma 59, Travis Head 23, Heinrich Klaasen 59, Nitish Kumar Reddy 12, Salil Arora 13, Shivang Kumar 12; Mukesh Choudhary 2-21, Anshul Kamboj 3-22, Jamie Overton 3-37, Gurjapneet Singh 1-34) beat Chennai Super Kings 184 for 8 in 20 overs (Rutraj Gaikwad 19, Ayush Mhatre 30, Maththew Short 34, Sarfaraz Khan 25, Shivam Dube 21, Jamie Overton 16, Anshul Kamboj 13*; Praful Hinge 1-60, Eshan Malinga 3-29, Nitish Kumar Reddy 2-31, Sakib Hussain 1-32, Shivang Kumar 1-18) by 10 runs

[Cricinfo]

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