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Dialog Powers the 142nd Royal-Thomian ‘Battle of the Blues’

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Sri Lanka’s longest rivalry in schools cricket comes alive this May as premier boys schools  Royal College Colombo and S. Thomas’ College Mt. Lavinia, will battle it out once again for the 142nd uninterrupted blue ribbon cricket encounter, the ‘Battle of the Blues’  played for the prestigious Rt. Hon. D. S. Senanayake Memorial Shield, from 6th to 8th May, 2021, at the Mahinda Rajapaksa International Cricket Stadium – Suriyaweva, Hambantota. 

The match will be played behind closed doors keeping in line with the COVID-19 restrictions and the health & safety guidelines mandated by Ministry of Health while Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) regulates playing conditions. The 142nd Battle of the Blues cricket encounter will be broadcast LIVE on Dialog Television channel number 72, and will also be available via LIVE stream on the ThePapare.com and the Dialog Viu app. The limited over “Mustangs Trophy” match will be played in a T20 format on the 10th of May, 2021.  

Due to the prevailing pandemic, Sri Lanka’s blue-ribbon annual cricket encounter will break from tradition and will be played for the first time in its 142-year-old illustrious history, out of Colombo at the Mahinda Rajapaksa International Cricket Stadium – Suriyaweva. The teams, coaches and support staff along with umpires and match officials will follow bio secure environment (BSE) protocols, in line with the COVID-19 health & safety guidelines under the supervision of Southern Province & Hambantota Regional health services.

In the 2021 edition of the ‘Battle of the Blues’, powered by Sri Lanka’s premier connectivity provider, Dialog Axiata PLC, the boys from Mt. Lavinia will be led by all-rounder Shalin De Mel, while the lads from Reid Avenue will play under the captaincy of elegant stroke-maker, Ahan Wickramasinghe. 

‘The Royal – Thomian’, has a rich and colourful history spanning across 142 years and is also the second longest uninterrupted cricket series played in the world, second only to the annual encounter played between St. Peters College, Adelaide and Prince Alfred College, Adelaide, Australia, that began just a year earlier and the Australia vs England Ashes Series just 02 years before.

In 1880, the first match in which only the boys took part was played on Galle Face Green, the present location of the Taj Samudra Hotel. This was the start to the centenary series. Both teams are said to have rowed their boats across Beira Lake to play the match. 

The playing fields of the ‘Roy – Tho’ has the distinction of producing cricketers who later became eminent heads of state, with S.  Thomas’ producing the father of the nation, the late Rt. Hon. D. S. Senanayake MP (1901 – 1902) and his son, the late Hon. Dudley Senanayake MP (1927-1929) as Prime Ministers of Ceylon, while Royal produced the late Rt. Hon. (General) Sir John Kotelawala MP (1914-1915) as Prime Minister and the first Executive President of Sri Lanka, the late J. R. Jayawardene (1925). 

The tally between the two schools at present stands at 35 all, with the highly-debated match in 1885, where Royal College was all out for 09 runs with no play on the second day which was considered a win by S. Thomas’ and considered a draw by Royal as shown by the respective souvenir books of the two schools. The shield at present sits, akin to the crown jewels, amongst the silverware in the Warden’s trophy cabinet at S. Thomas’ College Mt. Lavinia, after putting up a superb performance in 2019 under the captaincy of Sithara Hapuhinna, which will be challenged by a determined Royal XI, this year, who racked up impressive wins during the COVID-19 impacted calendar.  The boys from Reid Avenue last won the coveted shield under stewardship of Geeshanth Paditharatne in 2016. 

In 2019, on the 140th edition of the Royal-Thomian, Dialog rekindled a long and successful partnership with Sri Lanka’s Blue-Ribbon Big Match, The Battle of the Blues. The 142nd edition of the Royal-Thomian will be the thirteenth year that the match is sponsored by Dialog. Sri Lanka’s premier connectivity provider, Dialog Axiata has also made a pledge to contribute Rs. 1,000 for every run scored and 10,000 rupees for every wicket that fell. Last year’s exciting encounter contributed Rs. 1,008,000 to the ‘Play for a Cause’ pledge. The proceedings were directed in consultation with the Principal of Royal College and the Warden of S. Thomas’ College to support and empower deserving schools in the country. Since the inception of the ‘Play for a Cause’ pledge, Rs. 6,151,000 worth of cricket gear was donated to ten deserving schools. 

Played in the highest tradition of excellence, the two schools have a formed a bond of mutual respect, camaraderie, sportsmanship, and friendly adversaries on and off the field, which has stood for almost one and a half centuries. As remarked by a yesteryear Principal of Royal College, “There is no Royal without S. Thomas’ and no S. Thomas’ without Royal.”

 

 



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Kohli’s ninth IPL hundred powers Royal Challengers Bengaluru to the top

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Virat Kohli remained unbeaten on 105, guiding RCB to a win [Cricinfo]

After back-to-back ducks in his last two innings, Virat Kohli showed most emphatically that he had merely been out of runs and not out of form, scoring his ninth IPL hundred to lead Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) to the top of the IPL 2026 table with a commanding win over Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) in Raipur.

Kohli’s unbeaten 60-ball 105 was a vintage effort in a run-chase – smooth, controlled, and full of both relentless sprinting between the wickets and gorgeous strokeplay, particularly at either end of his innings. That he never seemed stretched, however, was perhaps the story of the match – it may have been decided by the relative quality of the bowling attacks, particularly the seamers.

RCB’s bowlers did a superb job to keep KKR down to below 200 even though they only lost four wickets, and KKR’s inexperienced seam attack simply couldn’t match them for discipline and ability to extract misbehaviour from a slightly two-paced surface – with the caveat that it may have eased up a little during the second innings.

This was the first time RCB had fielded all three of Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Jacob Duffy and Josh Hazlewood – the legspinner Suyash Sharma made way. This suggested RCB expected conditions to play similarly to their previous game in Raipur, against Mumbai Indians, with seam movement and inconsistent bounce throughout.

When the match began – after a rain delay of an hour and a quarter – it became clear that this was a much better pitch to bat on, but there was still something in it for the seamers. Bhuvneshwar showed this with a cross-seamer that nipped away to nick off Finn Allen in the third over, and Hazlewood showed this by getting a short-of-length ball to rear at Ajinkya Rahane and have him caught and bowled off a miscued pull in the fifth over.

KKR still scored 56 in their powerplay, though, and 31 of those runs came in two overs from Duffy, who took the new ball ahead of Hazlewood, and didn’t do too much that was obviously wrong, but Allen, Rahane and Angkrish Raghuvansh were good enough to put away marginal errors in line and length.

Raghuvanshi and Cameron Green put on 68 for the third wicket, starting slowly and finding it tricky to time the seamers but making a concerted effort to go after the left-arm spin of Krunal Pandya. Raghuvanshi used the slog-sweep to try and put him off his length, and Green tried to do the same thing by using the depth of his crease. Krunal started by conceding just five in the eighth over, but his last three went for 34.
Rasikh Salam then sneaked a skidder through Green in the 13th over, and the wicket may have come at the ideal moment for KKR because Rinku Singh walked in and began to find the boundary almost immediately. Raghuvanshi too stepped up a gear, playing some eye-catching shots, including a short-arm jab off Duffy and an effortless inside-out six off Krunal to rush from 21 off 16 to 57 off 35.
At the 16-over mark, KKR were 153 for 3, seemingly poised to get past 200. But Bhuvneshwar, Hazlewood and Rasikh put on a death-bowling masterclass, nailing a high percentage of their yorkers and erring on the full side and bowling low full-tosses almost every time they erred. The one time they erred on the short side and sent down a slot ball, Rinku launched Bhuvneshwar for a big six over midwicket, showing the small margins for error the bowlers were operating with. KKR only scored 39 off their last four overs.
KKR handed a new cap to Saurabh Dubey  the 28-year-old Vidarbha left-arm seamer who had replaced the injured Akash Deep in their squad, brought him on as their Impact Player, and gave him the brand-new ball. And he began with a thrilling first over in which he found seam movement in both directions, beat Jacob Bethell’s outside edge three times in the first four balls, and conceded just one run off the bat – a single to get off the mark that Kohli marked with a self-deprecating fist pump.

That Dubey over was the last bit of real joy with the ball for KKR. Vaibhav Arora kept drifting onto Kohli’s pads in an 18-run second over, and then Bethell took his revenge on Dubey by going 6, 4, 4 at the start of the third.

Kartik Tyagi removed Bethell with a nasty short ball that rushed him on the pull, but he followed that up by straying down the leg side and overcompensating with width, and Devdutt Padikkal put both away to the boundary to get his innings moving.

RCB finished the powerplay at 66 for 1, with Kohli swivelling to pull Tyagi for six in the sixth over and ending that phase on 30 off 14.

From there, it was just a case of ticking off the remaining runs with no need for undue risk. No one is better at that game than Kohli. He scored eight twos – the joint third-most for him in an IPL innings – and found the boundary whenever the viewer may have wondered how long it had been since the last one. Mishaps at the other end – Tyagi dismissed Padikkal with an into-the-pitch cutter before pinging Rajat Patidar on the helmet; a Sunil Narine carrom ball forced a miscue from Patidar; Manish Pandey took a flying one-hander at point to send back Tim David – were mere blips in RCB’s otherwise silky-smooth ride.

And as the end neared, Kohli grew more expansive, playing two of his most eye-catching shots – a straight six off Anukul Roy with barely any follow-through, and a whipped six of iron wrists off Tyagi – to hurry towards the century mark. He got there with a single off Arora in the 19th over, and Jitesh Sharma finished the game soon after, flat-batting Dubey past long-on to bring up victory with five balls remaining.

Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 194 for 4 in 19.1 overs  (Jacob Bethell 15, Virat Kohli 105*, Devdutt Padikkal 39, Rajat Patidar 11; Kartik Tyagi 3-32, Sunil Narine 1-31) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 192 for 4 in 20 overs  (Ajinkya Rahane 19, Finn Allen 18, Angkrish Raghuvanshi 71, Rinku Singh 49*, Cameron Green 32; Bhuveneshwar Kumar 1-34, Josh Hazelwood 1-35, Raasik Salam 1-35) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Veteran sports administrator Prema Pinnawala passes away

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Prema Pinnawala

Prema Pinnawala, one of Sri Lanka’s most experienced and influential sports administrators, passed away after a brief illness on Tuesday. He was 88 at the time of his passing.

‎Pinnawala, who dedicated more than six decades to sports administration, played a pivotal role in shaping athletics and Olympic sports governance in Sri Lanka. His contribution to sport extended across national and international platforms, making him a respected figure within the athletics fraternity.

‎He first rose to prominence as a sportsman during his school days at Christian Mission College in the 1950s. His journey into sports administration began in 1963 when he was appointed Chairman of the Sports Council at the University of Peradeniya, marking the start of a career that would span several decades.

‎Joining the Sri Lanka Insurance Corporation in the late 1960s, Pinnawala also became actively involved with the National Service Sports Association, where he held a number of positions over the years.

‎His association with athletics administration commenced in the late 1960s when he joined the committee of Sri Lanka Athletics. In 1978, he was elevated to the position of Vice President of the association, before taking on a more prominent national role in 1983 as Secretary General of the National Olympic Committee of Sri Lanka.

‎Pinnawala held the position for 15 years until 1998, becoming one of the key architects of Sri Lanka’s Olympic and sports administration during a transformative period. Following his tenure at the National Olympic Committee, he returned to Sri Lanka Athletics and assumed duties as General Secretary in 1998. He held the post thrice (1998-2010, 2013-2014 and 2017-2023) between 1998 and until his retirement in 2023.

‎Although his prolonged presence in sports administration, attracted criticism from certain quarters, Pinnawala remained steadfast, often maintaining that his continued involvement served the greater interests of sport. Undeterred by opposition, he continued to contribute extensively to the functioning of athletics.

‎Over the decades, he developed a reputation as an effective mediator and coordinator between local and international sporting bodies. His expertise and diplomatic approach saw his services sought by influential government officials, including heads of state, particularly in matters involving sports administration and international relations.

‎Internationally, Pinnawala earned considerable recognition within the athletics community. In 2025, his exceptional and long-standing service to athletics was acknowledged by World Athletics, which honoured him with the World Athletics Veteran Pin.

‎His contributions beyond Sri Lanka included serving as Secretary of the South Asian Sports Council, Secretary of the Media Committee of the Olympic Council of Asia, and as a Council Member of the Asian Athletics Association.

‎Apart from sports administration, Pinnawala also established himself as a prominent corporate leader, serving for many years as General Manager of the Sri Lanka Insurance Corporation.

‎He is survived by his wife, Jayani Pinnawala, a senior administrative officer and former Additional Secretary to the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, and their two daughters.

(RF)

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Ayesha Zafar’s rapid ton crushes Zimbabwe

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Ayesha Zafar's unbeaten 102 came off just 47 balls [Cricbuzz]

Before the first T20I against Zimbabwe Women, Ayesha Zafar had hit just one six in 28 T20 innings, with her career strike-rate in the early 80s. On Tuesday (May 12), she hit two sixes and 15 fours, smashing the joint third-fastest Women’s T20I hundred in a record-filled win for Pakistan Women.

Her unbeaten 47-ball 102 propelled Pakistan to 237/5 – the first time they crossed 200 in the format – paving the way for a whopping 153-run win in Karachi, their biggest ever margin by runs in T20Is. By the time she was done, Zafar’s career strike-rate had gone up to 97.

The 31-year-old Zafar, who made a comeback to the side in March after nearly two years away, put on a fine show dominant with leg-side hits, notching up her first T20 fifty and converting it to three figures.

At the crease in the second over, Zafar repeatedly shuffled to the backfoot and targeted the leg-side against spinners, pulling any remotely short deliveries to the midwicket or square leg fence. On 20, she got a reprieve playing that shot, with square leg shelling a catch. But Zafar continued to play that stroke, also punishing anything too full by hitting it firmly down the ground.

 

Gull Feroza, meanwhile, departed for a 19-ball 37, having given them an early push. Zafar raced to 40 off 18, but slowed down a bit thereafter, reaching her fifty in 29 balls.

From the 16-over mark, Zafar picked up again, showcasing her power-hitting against quicks, particularly with shots in the V and towards midwicket, using the crease well to make room. A 67-run stand off 35 balls with Aliya Riaz (48) and a 70-run partnership off just 27 balls with Fatima Sana ensured they easily crossed 200 for the first time. A last-ball four ensured Zafar crossed her three-figure mark.

In reply, Zimbabwe couldn’t really match the run-scoring, pegged down by a flurry of wickets in the Powerplay. Sana prised out Beloved Biza and Kelly Ndiraya off back-to-back balls in the third over to leave Zimbabwe at 14/3. Despite three boundaries in the sixth over, they had slipped to 30/5 at the end of the Powerplay.

There was very little resistance thereafter, with opener Natasha Mtomba top-scoring with 24 and staying put until the tenth over. No other player crossed 20.

Sana finished with 3-7, becoming the highest wicket-taker among T20I quicks for Pakistan Women (46). Zafar won the Player of the Match award and is now the only other Pakistan Women’s T20I centurion besides Muneeba Ali.

Brief scores:
Pakistan Women 237/5 in 20 overs (Gull Feroza 37, Ayesha Zafar 102*, Aliya Riaz 48, Fatima Sana 21*;  Precious Marange 1-39, Nomvelo Sibanda 2-59, Beloved Biza 1-33, Michelle Mavunga 1-23) beat Zimbabwe Women 84 all out in 18.2 overs (Natasha Mtomba 24, Beloved Biza 10, Adel Zimunu 18; Fatima Sana 3-07, Sadia Iqbal 2-14, Rameen Shamin 1-18, Natalia Pervaiz 2-03) by 153 runs.

[Cricbuzz]

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