Sports
SL Athletics team leaves for India with new ‘BELIEVE’ kits
National athletes who left the island yesterday (23rd) to compete in the 65th Interstate Athletics Championship in Patiala, India were geared with new competition kits by ‘BELIEVE’ Sportswear.
‘Believe’ is the sports and active wear arm of Ceylon Sports which is to be launched in the near future. The groundbreaking initiative by Ceylon Sports will see international style running gear manufactured in Sri Lanka for the first time. The trendy and modern collection include a wide range of sports gear seen in international competitions in the likes of two-piece running kits, one piece running kits, stylish calf wraps, headbands, warm up wear which are especially manufactured in consultation with experts. With the help of experts and athletes, ‘Believe’ has created customized collections for each athletic discipline named ‘Run’, ‘Jump’, ‘Throw’ which will cater to specific needs of the respective events.
‘We are grateful to ‘BELIEVE’ sportswear for providing kits for the National athletic team who will be competing at the 65th Interstate Athletics Championship in Patiala, India. The Athletes will be pushing for Olympic qualification, and we are thankful to ‘BELIEVE’ for coming forward to support our athletes. We hope to continue this partnership for all future National team involvements,” said Maj.Gen Palitha Fernando, President -Sri Lanka Athletics, expressing his admiration.
The team which took wing to India yesterday consists four athletes who are on the borderline of the Olympic qualification quota. Nilani Ratnayake who is already within the Olympic quota is also part of the team. The addition of women’s 4x100m relay team is a notable move as it is the first time they feature in an overseas competition outside the South Asian Games in 2016 and 2019. The team comprises of the first five athletes at the last National Athletics Championship. Four of the five athletes are below 21 years. Amasha de Silva, Shelinda Jansen, Medhani Jayamanne and Safiya Yamic will compete in the relay, while hurdler Lakshika Sugandhi is included as the fifth member.
Young sprinter, Shelinda Jansen of youth Olympic fame also expressed her admiration of ‘BELIVE’ sportswear. “It’s brilliant that Ceylon Sports have come up with the ‘BELIVE’ sportswear, as a young female athlete it’s very difficult to find trendy comfortable running gear in Sri Lanka for a decent price, I ran in ‘BELEIVE’ gear at the Nationals, and it was a perfect fit. I am excited to don this gear in India.”
Ceylon Sports provided running kits for athletes during the National Athletics championship and National Trials held at the Sugathadasa Stadium earlier this year and are hoping to join hands for upcoming International events such as World Junior Championship, Asian Athletics Championship, Asian Junior Championship and World Athletics championship 2022.
Ceylon Sports & Ceylon Athletics was Sri Lanka’s first web and social media platform which initiated providing much needed context and awareness on Sri Lankan Athletics aiding in the upliftment of the sport at a time athletics in the country was experiencing a dip in popularity. With several campaigns and coverage which included live streaming of all National and major international events and unique coverage methods it was able to increase athletes’ interest and desire for better performance while was able to bring fans back to athletics.
Extending beyond popularizing the sport, Ceylon Sports identified that Sri Lankan athletes did not have an avenue to get affordable international style running gear which will provide comfort during the events apart from paying hefty sums for major global brands.
‘BELIEVE’ is eyeing to fulfill this requirement in the local market and will soon be available for purchase online. National athletes will receive special discounts while a percentage of the income will be used to create a charity fund which will help underprivileged athletes, a service Ceylon Sports has been engaged in silence for many years.
Latest News
Shamas, Feroza hit tons as Pakistan win big to clinch ODI series
Pakistan Women 343/4 in 50 overs (Sadaf Shamas 101, Gull Feroza 100, Sidra Amin 59; Christina Mutasa 1-19, Lindokuhle Mabhero 1-52, Olinder Chare 1-40, Nomvelo Sibanda 1-61) beat Zimbabwe Women 137 in 39 overs (Runyararo Pasipanodya 33*; Fatima Sana 3-15, Diana Baig 1-23, Momina Riasat 2-39, Rameem Shamim 2-20, Syed Aroob Shah 2-18) by 206 runs
Latest News
Connolly ton in vain as batting muscle fires Sunrisers Hyderabad to top of the table
Catches win matches is probably one of the oldest and most overused clichés in cricket. But it couldn’t have been truer on Wednesday. Punjab Kings (PBKS) dropped three catches and missed a stumping; Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) dropped two but held onto most of the important ones. The final result? SRH, despite a maiden Cooper Connolly century, marched on to defeat PBKS by 33 runs and displace them at the top of the points table.
Travis Head (38 off 19) and Abhishek Sharma (35 off 13) got SRH off to a flying start. Heinrich Klaasen (69 off 43) and Ishan Kishan (55 off 32) made use of the missed chances, smashing quick fifties, while fit-again Nitish Kumar Reddy provided the finishing touch with 29 not out off 13 as SRH finished on 235 for 4.
SRH had never lost defending a 220-plus target in the IPL and that stat remained intact. Connolly – who had two lives – smashed his maiden century in any format, finishing unbeaten on 107 off 59 balls, but got little support from the rest as PBKS were handed a third straight defeat. With the win, SRH are now leading the table with 14 points, while PBKS remain on 13.
SRH came into the game with a powerplay run rate of 11.75. They went at 13.16 on Wednesday evening, amassing 79 in the first six overs. There is no shifting of gears with Travishek – they were at it almost from the get-go. Abhishek defended the first ball of the innings off Arshdeep Singh, and then effortlessly lofted the second ball over extra cover for a six. He then lay into Marco Jansen, who was given the new ball, going 6, 4, 6, 0, 4. Head, a silent spectator till then on 2 off 4, was at his pulling best, hitting back-to-back sixes off Arshdeep, peppering the deep-square-leg boundary before nudging a full toss down leg.
SRH raced past 50 in 3.2 overs but Lockie Ferguson got PBKS back, inducing a top edge of Abhishek’s blade that spooned straight up with Shreyas Iyer doing the rest coming in from mid-off. Head, though, rattled along as SRH ended the powerplay on a high.
“It’s been a bit of a virus for us” was how Ricky Ponting described PBKS’ catching during a mid-game chat. It became worse as the evening progressed. Yuzvendra Chahal struck in his first over, right after the powerplay, deceiving Head with a wrong’un that was miscued to long-off. He could have had at least two more if not for the fielding bug that hit PBKS. Kishan was given three chances – two drops and a missed stumping – on 9, 18 and 19. Klaasen should have had his first single-digit score of the season, but he was dropped on 9. They made PBKS pay.
Kishan was hardly at his fluent best; he had a control percentage of just 65.43 but hung on. After the early chances, he settled in, getting his timing back, stitching an 88-run stand with Klaasen in eight overs. He thumped Vijaykumar Vyshak for three straight sixes in the 14th over to raise a 28-ball fifty. By the time he fell, SRH’s run rate had gone past 11.50.
While the focus was on Klaasen, Reddy’s was phenomenal with his death-overs hitting. He started the 17th over with a scorching pull off Jansen before tonking Ferguson over deep midwicket as well. Klaasen reached his fifty off 32 balls and ended the innings on a high, dumping Vyshak for a six over extra cover and four to fine leg before falling off the last ball of the innings.
PBKS had never won in Hyderabad in their last eight attempts. To change that, their top order had to fire. They didn’t. Pat Cummins’ superb captaincy saw Priyansh Arya fall in the first over. He signalled mid-on to go back to the rope, telegraphing a full ball. Instead, he bowled a bouncer angling away from Arya, who was lulled into a pull, which he only mistimed to deep-backward square leg, where Eshan Malinga took a lovely catch running and diving forward.
Reddy struck with the first ball of his spell, getting Prabhsimran Singh to top-edge a fuller ball straight up with Cummins running back from mid-on and taking another good catch. Prabharya were gone in seven balls. Iyer punched Reddy through covers first ball but skewed a hard-length Malinga delivery to mid-off. Marcus Stoinis salvaged PBKS’ powerplay to an extent, taking them to 57 for 3 after six, but the damage had been done.
In his maiden IPL season, Connolly had already looked the part, and he shone again, even as the rest of the PBKS batters struggled. He hit Cummins for a four and six in the powerplay and went back-to-back fours against Malinga. Once Stoinis fell, caught behind off Shivang Kumar, Connolly ensured he batted through. He got support from Suryansh Shedge for a bit but once Shedge and Shashank Singh fell in quick succession, Connolly was left alone.
He reached his fifty off 34 balls. The required rate by then had crossed 16. The SRH bowlers also made life tough by bowling slower balls into the surface, while the two left-arm spinners, Harsh Dubey and Shivang, curbed the run flow with Jansen not finding his timing.
Connolly raced through the 70s with two sixes against Malinga and reached his century in the final over, with a falling sweep against Shivang over backward square leg. While Connolly finished unbeaten on 107, the second-best score of the PBKS innings was 28, and that proved to be the difference.
Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 235 for 4 in 20 overs (Abhishek Sharma 35, Travis Head 38, Ishan Kishan 55, Heinrich Klaasen 69, Nitish Kumar Reddy 29*; Arshdeep Singh 1-43, Lockie Ferguson 1-41, Yuzvendra Chahal 1-32, Vijaykumar Vyshak 1-54) beat Punjab Kings 202 for 7 in 20 overs (Cooper Connolly 107*, Marcus Stoinis 28, Suryansh Shedge 25, Marco Jansen 19; Pat Cummins 2-34, Nitish Kumar Reddy 1-11, Eshan Malinga 1-36, Sakib Hussain 1-40, Shivang Kumar 2-45) by 33 runs
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Ahmedabad to host IPL 2026 final on May 31
-
News7 days agoRooftop Solar at Crossroads as Sri Lanka Shifts to Distributed Energy Future
-
News2 days agoCJ urged to inquire into AKD’s remarks on May 25 court verdict
-
News6 days ago“Three-in-one blood pressure pill can significantly reduce risk of recurrent strokes”
-
News3 days agoUSD 3.7 bn H’tota refinery: China won’t launch project without bigger local market share
-
News6 days agoAlarm raised over plan to share Lanka’s biometric data with blacklisted Indian firm
-
News5 days agoTen corruption cases set for court in May, verdict ordered in one case – President
-
News4 days agoEaster Sunday Case: Ex-SIS Chief concealed intel, former Defence Secy tells court
-
News6 days agoUSD 2.5 mn fraud probe: Interdicted MoF official found dead at home
