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Yoga offers rugby players an escape route

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by a Special Sports Correspondent

Yoga is used in many sports as a therapy, but hardly do we hear of such a combination between yoga and rugby, especially in Sri Lanka.

It did happen recently when the head coach of Rugby Promotion Foundation Ajith Fernando thought it apt to hire the services of a yoga teacher and send his chargers through some yoga drills.

Fernando, an accomplished rugby coach and an ex-employee of Sri Lanka Rugby, has observed over the years that rugby players in the island do little to put their lives in order. Most of them are good players, but very few eat right and organise their lives properly.

To put these lives in order Fernando invited yoga teacher Yoga Siromani Kelum Sri to take the boys and girls at his rugby academy through some mind relaxing yoga activities.

“I realised that these rugby players are stressed out and they needed to relax because when you are stressed you tend to get injured. Rugby is a game where there is so much physical contact and falling, so it’s important for players to have relaxed muscles and a clear mind. Yoga helps condition both mind and body,” said Kelum who is armed with a Diploma in Yoga Therapy from the famous Shivananda Ashram in India.

Kelum is not a person who has spent a sedentary life and has limited himself to a light exercise form like yoga. He had his moments during his youth as a kick-boxer and has also done drama and accepted acting roles. Hence he can easily understand how demanding rugby can get and the importance for rugby players to try yoga.

So the boys and girls from Rugby Promotion foundation made a journey to his yoga studio named Sri Aoura Yoga Retreat and situated in Anuradhapura.

“Yoga helps reduce sports injuries and reduce pain in existing injuries. If you continue with yoga you can cure these injuries permanently,” said Kelum.

The participants at the session were taken through sessions where they were taught breathing techniques and stretching. They were also taught the three qualities (Gunas) of how yoga categorises all things in the word including food. According to Kelum all things including food are categorised into Tamasic (dull/heavy), Rajasic (energetic/strong) or the Satvic (pure) quality. “When you consume vegetables and milk which have Satvic qualities they digest fast compared to meats which will take a long time to digest and dull the mind and slow down activity till digestion is completed” explained Kelum.

He said that he was concerned that the present generation sportsmen and women consume much fast foods; sometimes taking them even as their main meals. Rugby coach Fernando chips into the conversation and says that his academy has programmes to feed participants with nutritious food after a training session. “It’s vital that a rugby player has a solid healthy meal within half an hour after his workout,” Fernando said.

Yoga dates back to more than 5000 years and was used widely in Northern India by Yogis and Rishis. Then India’s yoga teachers started to travel the world and conduct sessions; hence its promotion and gaining global popularity. Some of the international sports stars who have made yoga a part of their lifestyle are Shaquille O, Neal (Basketball), Ray Lewis (National Football League), Kevin Love (Basketball) and Evan Longoria (Baseball). They were all bowled over by yoga’s ability to relax, rejuvenate and train the mind to focus sharply at a task at hand.

The Rugby Promotion Foundation has regular sessions with Kelum. “Once when they were here I organised a drama session for them after the yoga training. I use yoga and drama in my relaxation programmes. Most of these rugby players were so taken up with the drama session that they wanted more of it. All this goes on to show that sports people are so stressed out and need a mode to release that stress. After the yoga session and stretching there were children who said we’ve had enough. But when I introduced them to drama those who wanted to call it a day in training went on for a few more hours,” said Kelum underscoring the therapeutic benefits and using relaxing techniques with sportsmen and women.

Kelum says that yoga offers a catalogue which is loaded with techniques that are helpful in maintaining the human body. But he says that with rugby players, who are children, the target is to make them release stress, be supple and be free of injuries.

Rugby coach Fernando used to take his chargers for regular beach training sessions and make them be with nature. “We had our sessions till recently where the players wore masks and followed health guidelines specified for combating COVID-19. But all that has stopped because of the third wave of the pandemic,” said Fernando.

But these rugby players now know of a way out of this stagnated position they are in life due to the pandemic. They only have to refer to the tutorials they were offered by yoga teacher Kelum. Yoga can offer a total body workout and keep you fit, strong and focused till the state authorities make the announcement that they’ve lifted travel restrictions and it’s safe to go and play rugby again.



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Zimbabwe take on Ireland with clarity about Super Eights path

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Blessing Muzarabani has been Player of the Match in each of Zimbabwe's two matches at the T20 World Cup 2026 so far [Cricinfo]

When Ireland arrived in Kandy on Sunday afternoon, with just two points after three games, their chances of qualifying for Super Eights may have seemed fanciful. But courtesy an outstanding Sri Lankan chase against Australia on Monday night, the possibilities for Group B have been thrown wide open.

Sri Lanka have qualified, but Ireland now know that a win against Zimbabwe on Tuesday will keep them in with a very real chance of qualification – provided Sri Lanka also beat Zimbabwe in their final match.

If those very specific set of circumstances – including Australia beating Oman – occur, then Australia, Zimbabwe and Ireland could all end on four points each, separated solely by net run-rate.

But that might be getting ahead of ourselves. Zimbabwe simply need to win against Ireland to end all speculation, and considering they’re coming off a stunning 23-run victory over Australia, it would take a brave person to back against them.

Captain Sikandar Raza is also not one to allow his team to let their guard down. He has emphasised the need to maintain focus, warning that earlier performances will “count for nothing if the team slips up now.

Ireland, meanwhile, have lost to Sri Lanka and Australia earlier in the tournament but their dominant 96-run win over Oman – including a tournament-high of 235 – will have provided a timely boost in confidence. They also come in with a chip on their shoulder, over constant comparisons to Associate nations, something they will be keen to put right with a win over Zimbabwe.

Lending more unpredictability to this game is that the historical rivalry is remarkably balanced, with both sides having won eight apiece of their 18 T20I meetings.

With the extra bounce on offer, the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium is one of the rare Sri Lanka grounds where more wickets have fallen to seam (201) than spin (154). It would be no surprise if seamers from both teams prove to be the difference on Tuesday.

In Richard Ngarava, Blessing Muzarabani and Brad Evans,  Zimbabwe have a pace triumvirate that can be the envy of any side in this tournament. They’ve taken 16 wickets amongst them, and managed to brush past Australia even with Ngarava out of the XI. Moreover, Muzarabani has won two Player-of-the-Match awards.

In Mark Adair, Ireland have the quintessential work horse. Despite making his debut after Josh Little and Barry McCarthy, he’s played more T20Is – 100 – than the other two and managed to pick up 142 wickets. He also loves bowling against Zimbabwe; his 24 wickets are the most he has taken against an opposition. With Little finding his form last time out with a first three-for since March 2024, Ireland will know any chance of success depends on how quick their seam-bowling unit find their rhythm.

Ireland are unlikely to change a winning combination after their exploits against Oman.

Ireland (probable XI):  Tim Tector,  Ross Adair,  Harry Tector,  Lorcan Tucker (capt & wk),  Curtis Campher,  George Dockrell, Gareth Delany, Mark Adair,  Josh Little  Barry McCarthy,  Matthew Humphreys

Zimbabwe would have had a close eye on the pitch Sri Lanka played Australia on, but the only expected change is the return of Richard Ngarava who missed out last time as a precaution.

Zimbabwe (probable XI): Brian Bennett, Tadiwanashe Marumani (wk),  Dion Myers, Sikandar Raza (capt),  Ryan Burl,  Tashinga Musekiwa, Brad Evans,  Wellington Masakadza,  Graeme Cremer,  Blessing Muzarabani  Richard Ngarava

[Cricinfo]

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India pass RPS Litmus Test with commanding win

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Ishan Kushan’s stunning batting effort won him the Man of the Match award.

India arrived at this World Cup with the pundits tipping them to defend the crown they lifted two years ago in Barbados. On paper, they looked a side with every base covered, power at the top, steel in the middle and a bowling unit that can squeeze the life out of any chase. The only perceived chink in the armour was how they would fare on slow, gripping surfaces where the ball refuses to come onto the bat, the kind served up at Colombo’s R. Premadasa Stadium.

On Sunday, against arch-rivals Pakistan, they ticked that box with authority.

India-Pakistan contests have carried added political edge since the Kargil conflict of 1999 between the two nuclear-armed neighbours. The hype machine goes into overdrive each time they meet. Yet beneath the noise, one stark truth remains, India have held the upper hand in recent years and more often than not it has been one-way traffic.

RPS is not a venue for the faint-hearted. It exposes free-flowing strokemakers and humbles flat-track bullies. Ask Australia, who ate humble pie there against Zimbabwe last week. At Premadasa, flair alone won’t cut it; you need patience, game awareness and the willingness to graft. But India, unfazed by reputation or conditions, turned that theory on its head.

It was opener Ishan Kishan who lit up the cauldron with a swashbuckling 77 off 44 balls, striking at 200 and treating the sluggish surface with calculated disdain. He pierced gaps, picked lengths early and made the pitch look far more obliging than it truly was. Once India surged past the 170 mark, Pakistan were chasing shadows.

Such is the depth of India’s bowling arsenal that even 150 often feels like a mountain to opponents. They hunt in packs, squeeze in the middle overs and shut the door at the death.

As for Kishan, he had been in the wilderness for more than two years before earning a recall on the back of prolific domestic form. Since returning, he has grabbed his chance with both hands and refused to loosen his grip.

In a 20-nation tournament where scripts can flip in the space of two overs, it would be foolish to declare the race run. T20 cricket has a habit of turning logic upside down. Yet on current evidence, not many sides possess the depth, balance and bench strength to knock India off their perch.

Envy often follows success, and India have had their fair share of both. But their dominance is not built on the IPL alone. It stems from a culture that demands players step outside their comfort zones, evolve and buy into a larger blueprint. Those unwilling to embrace that ethos are quickly left high and dry.

Sunday’s spectacle was also a reminder of cricket’s economic pull. RPS was packed to the rafters, a sea of blue with pockets of green, as thousands of Indian and Pakistani fans created a carnival atmosphere. Their presence was a welcome shot in the arm for Sri Lankan economy, with many extending their stay to soak in the south coast’s scenic charms.

With shifting geopolitics in the region and several of India’s neighbours at daggers drawn, Sri Lanka is poised to host more marquee contests in the years ahead. The challenge now is to keep raising standards, upgrading facilities, maintaining venues and ensuring fans leave with memories worth repeating. On Sunday, on and off the field, it was a show befitting the occasion.

by Rex Clementine

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Trinity make strong start after restricting Nalanda to 259

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Dimantha Mahavithana (44n.o.) and Pulisha Thilakarathne (31n.o.) put on an unfinished first wicket stand for Trinity to post 82 for no wickets at stumps in reply to Nalanda’s 259 on day one of the Under 19 match which commenced at Asgiriya on Monday.

‎The home team were scoring at a healthy run rate of close to five runs an over.

‎The return of Sri Lanka Under 19 players seem to have made their lineup stronger as both Sethmika Senevirathne and Mahavithana made their presence felt.

‎Senevirathne shared six wickets with Chaniru Senarathne to restrict visitors to 259 runs.

‎For Nalanda, Ranmith Dinuwara (51) and Mihin Zoysa (53) made half centuries, while Osanda Pamuditha (47) and Gevindu Manamperi (36) were the others to make notable contributions. (RF)

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