Sports
Bertie Ekanayake – The versatile Sports Personality of the Royal Ceylon Air Force
Flight Sergeant Bertie Ekanayake (Clk GD) is considered as one of the finest sportsmen ever to be produced by the Royal Ceylon Air Force (RCyAF). Ekanayake was an old boy of Zahira College Colombo. He represented Ceylon in Boxing from 1958 to 1964 and represented Defence Services in rugger, boxing, basketball and soccer. He represented the RCyAF in rugger, boxing, basketball, soccer, athletics, cricket and hockey.
Bertie Ekanayake was a key member of the RCyAF Boxing team which won the prestigious Xavier Roche Memorial Challenge Shield presented by the ABA Ceylon to the Most Successful Boxing Club of the year in 1961.
He represented Ceylon in Boxing from 1958 to 1964. He was the Fly Weight Champion of Sri Lanka in 1958, 1959 and 1960, Feather Weight Champion of Sri Lanka in 1961 and 1963, Feather Weight Champion of Pakistan in 1963, Defence Services Champion in 1958, 1959, 1961, 1962 and 1964. He was the undisputed RCyAF Champion from 1958 to 1963 and the only winner at the Ceylon Vs Pakistan contest held in Ceylon in 1961 (Pakistan won 6 – 1). Ekanayake toured with the National Boxing Team to India, Thailand and Pakistan and captained the National Boxing team at the First Asian Boxing Championship in Bangkok in 1963. He was selected to represent the country at the Rome Olympics in 1960, however an injury prevented him from attending.
In rugby, he excelled as a fine full back and represented the Air Force from 1959 to 1973. He represented Defence Services from 1959 to 1962, 1965 and 1968. He was a key member of the RCyAF team which became runners up of Clifford Cup championship in 1965. He was selected for Ceylon Trials in 1961 and 1965 and represented Colombo Clubs vs. Presidents XV. Bertie Ekanayake functioned as the Assistant Manager of the Ceylon Rugger team in 1972. In basketball, he represented Combined Services team at the All-India tournament in 1962.
Flight Sergeant Ekanayake was the first winner of the prestigious ‘Varatharasa Trophy’ in 1962, which recognizes the Best Sportsman of the year in the RCyAF. He won the award again in 1963.
by Air Cdre Padman De Costa
(Former Secretary Air Force Sports Council and Defence Service Sports Board)
Foreign News
Somali referee Artan barred from entering USA
Omar Artan, who was set to be the first Somali to referee at the World Cup finals, has been dropped from the list of officials after he was denied entry to the United States.
Artan, the 2025 Confederation of African Football (CAF) men’s referee of the year, was barred from entering the country at Miami International Airport and is currently in Turkey.
No reason for Artan’s repatriation has been issued by US immigration authorities, but Somalia is one of several countries on a travel ban list introduced by President Donald Trump’s administration.
After speaking to the US authorities, world governing body Fifa said Artan will miss the tournament.
“Fifa can confirm that match official Omar Abdulkadir Artan will be unable to train and officiate at the Fifa World Cup 2026 after he was denied entry into the United States,” read a statement.
“Fifa is not involved in host country immigration processes, including visa adjudications, and has been informed by authorities that Artan’s status will not be changed at present.
“In line with previous Fifa events, a host government ultimately determines who receives a visa and who is admitted into their country.”
A senior adviser to Somalia’s ministry of youth and sports confirmed the denial of entry to the BBC and said Artan had been travelling with valid documents.
A Somali embassy official in Nairobi told the BBC that Artan’s diplomatic passport had been issued specifically to ease his travel after earlier visa difficulties.
The Somali Football Federation (SFF) has contacted Fifa seeking urgent clarification.
Speaking to BBC World Service, Andrew Giuliani, who leads the White House Task Force on the World Cup, said: “While I can’t go into the derog [derogatory information] on that I can tell you it was the right decision by customs and border patrol and I support that decision.”
Artan was among the 52 referees announced by Fifa to officiate at the World Cup finals in Canada, Mexico and the United States, which runs from 11 June to 19 July.
An official in the Somali national football league championships, Artan became a Fifa referee in 2018 and has officiated at the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon).
[BBC]
Sports
Stokes, Atkinson under ECB investigation cloud following nightclub incident
England captain Ben Stokes and pacer Gus Atkinson are under investigation by the England and Wales Cricket Board for breaching team protocols after the team’s 115-run win over New Zealand in the first Test at Lord’s.
[Cricbuzz]
Latest News
Suthar’s debut six-for powers India to their biggest Test win
In the end, the Afghanistan batters did not die wondering. Their lower order swung away, time and again. Their patience was worn down in the sweltering New Chandigarh heat and India sealed a win by an innings and 300 runs, their biggest in Test cricket.
Afghanistan were up against it right away on the morning of day three of this one-off Test, only their second against India in the format. Debutant Manay Suthar resumed overnight on a three-for, and bowled with turn and guile on a pitch that had flattened out for everyone else. He ended with figures of 6 for 33 – the third best figures for an Indian bowler on a Test debut – and bundled out Afghanistan for 152.
India enforced the follow on. In their second effort, trailing by 412 runs, Afghanistan pushed Suthar back from his attacking lines by stepping down the pitch to him. Sediqullah Atal, who scored 42, led the charge by smashing him for a six and a four right before tea. In many ways, however, Suthar had already won the match for India by then.
Consistently bowling around the 90 kph mark, Suthar plucked out Sharafuddin Ashraf in Afghanistan’s first innings, spinning one past him. Then, he accounted for Rahmat Shah’s crucial wicket – the middle-order batter had brought up a stoic fifty off 100 balls, resisting India through the first hour and a half. Suthar bowled him around the legs, an expansive sweep was his undoing.
Rahmat was the eighth wicket to fall and it sealed Suthar’s five-for. A while later, he pinned Mohammad Saleem on the pads for his sixth. This last dismissal was the latest in a line of bad reviews (or lack thereof) from either side throughout the day. Suthar had pitched the delivery outside leg. For some reason, Saleem did not review and he was animated at the dugout as he walked back.
The tall Prasidh Krishna had begun the day from the other end, along with Suthar. Prasidh stuck to back-of-a-length deliveries, utilising the angles off the pitch to create jeopardy for the batters. He also struck the first blow for India, when he got the ball to jag back in, catch the inside edge onto the stumps, and send back Azmatullah Omarzai.
Mohammed Siraj came on for a spell of three overs, for five runs, the highlight of which was when he comically reviewed a clear inside-edge into the pads for an lbw. Soon, Washington Sundar came on from his end, and Kuldeep from the other, bowling in tandem. Kuldeep hesitated to put revs on the ball and for a period, both bowlers looked innocuous in comparison to Suthar.
However, Ashraf visibly struggled to bat with a groin injury. Kuldeep began lobbing up balls that Ashraf needed to step out to deadbat. Suthar returned to take advantage of his limited reach, and had him edging behind.
Washington also picked up the final wicket of Afghanistan’s first innings, when he had Ziaur Rahman going for a huge swipe across the line. Pant ran in to complete a catch. This would be his sole wicket in the first innings, but Suthar’s prodigious spin – and six-for – ensured that Sundar, the wily offspinner, would get his own turn in the spotlight next.
After lunch, Atal continued walking down the pitch, once in a while, to negate Suthar’s more threatening options. But India’s other two spinners, Washington and Kuldeep – who just could not get it to spin as much on a flat track – showed their versatility instead.
Washington was the star spinner in the second innings, using his drift through the air instead of big turn off the pitch. He picked up 4 for 36, bowling with smarts against an Afghanistan line-up that tried to follow Atal’s lead by attacking the spinners. Kuldeep struggled to hit consistent lines, but kept lobbing the balls up and waited for the Afghanistan batters to hit him across the line.
After lunch, Atal receded into a shell. On the other hand, his partners chose rash shots to force the issue for Afghanistan. Siraj had already prised out Atal’s opening partner, Abdul Malik, after a patient 40-ball eight by getting a delivery to jag into his pads. Then, Rahmanullah Gurbaz swiped Kuldeep across the line in a rush of blood, mistiming the ball straight to long-on. The wicket came against the run of play, with him already on 24 off 23, bossing a tiring India spin attack in the blistering heat of New Chandigarh.
Next, Rahmat – Afghanistan’s best batter from their first innings – danced down the pitch to Washington and holed out at wide mid-off. Fifteen minutes before tea, captain Hashmatullah Shahidi edged a tentative prod to Shubman Gill at first slip and Washington got his second wicket of the innings. Both these wickets were a result of a consistent line, attacking batters in the outside-off channel.
Afghanistan’s resistance broke down completely on the last ball before tea. Atal, who had batted patiently thus far, leaned into an ill-judged lofted drive, off Washington, hitting it straight to point.
When they returned to bat after tea, Afghanistan’s lower-order batters were in no mood to stick around. Suthar plucked out one last wicket, pinning Afsar Zazai on the pads off a front-foot defense. On the other hand, Azmatullah Omarzai, Nangeyalia Kharote, and Mohammad Saleem all fell while miscuing lofted shots. Saleem’s edge to B Sai Sudharsan at covers sealed an innings-win for India.
Scores:
India 564 for 8 dec in 127 overs (KL Rahul 100, Sai Sudarshan 81, Shubman Gill 126, Rishbah Pant 81, Washington Sundar 52*; Mohammed Saleem 6-140) beat Afghanistan 152 in 58.4 overs (Rahmat Shah 60; Prasidh Krishna 3-37, Manav Suthar 6-33 ) and 112 in 35.5 overs (Sediqullah Atal 42; Manav Suthar 1-29, Washington Sundar 4-36, Kuldeep Yadav 3-30) by an innings and 300 runs
[Cricinfo]
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