Sports
Sanath Jayasuriya;

Loved beyond boundaries
by Aravinthan Arunthavanathan
When AB De Villiers strides out to the middle, the crowd at Chinnaswammy stadium in Bengaluru chant ABeee, ABee. When Lasith Malinga is at the top of his mark at the Wankhede in Mumbai, the echelons echo Maliii….Maliii…. AB De Villers and Malinga are top notch members of an elite coterie in international cricket, who are revered outside their land of origin. The membership in this elite circle extends to a select few like Sir Vivian Richards, Sir Ian Botham in the past to Chris Gayle, Kieron Pollard and Kane Williamson at present. The most recent entrant to this club is Kumar Sangakkara who seems to be captivating the English with his charisma. Kumar may seem to the inventors of Cricket that he is more English than most English. Exuding elegance and captivating with charisma Sangakkara has obtained membership in the elite club interestingly post retirement. However, Kumar isn’t the first such Lankan to be adored in an alien land.
Immigration encounters abroad are not the pleasantest of experiences for any traveler. It does not get any worse when you have made an unknown blunder in your documentation and end up in a soup. It was exactly the case for yours truly in Kolkata two years ago. A lengthy delay seemed inevitable. The immigration official was calling his superior to escalate the issue. The line was not reachable. Luckily that day I was wearing a Sri Lankan cricket T Shirt. It’s my go to clothing when travelling because of the comfort more than anything else. Yet that was good enough for us to start a conversation on Cricket. There was no mention about the present but the past. Unsurprisingly the dominance of a dynamite southpaw from down south was the central topic. Thankfully, I remembered the minute details which many would not regarding Sanath Jayasuriya’s exploits against our neighbors. Surprisingly, immigration official reminded me even more. We stuck a cord instantly. The superior was not even needed. The parting words were “Well Afterall you are from Sanath Jayasuriya’s land, pay attention to detail the next time you come.” I do not know Sanath in person, but he was my savior that day. Every time ever since, there hasn’t been a single visit where I haven’t encountered an Indian who adores Sanath’s exploits. The adulation he garners in a cricket loving nation with surplus of home bred demigods is beyond admiration. If Sangakkara connects with English through charisma and class Sanath was blockbuster material in India through brutal butchery and methodical massacring of Indian attacks during his career. Sanath was a villain to India who was too good not to be liked. Those who witnessed it know it.
Sanath’s rise to prominence came at the Kotla in New Delhi in a 1996 World Cup group game. Sanath’s evisceration of the Indian attack announced to the world loud and clear that Sri Lanka were not push overs anymore. The same year Sanath notched his first century against India at a packed Khettharama making a mockery of another Indian total built around a Sachin century. In the years that followed since 1996 every year saw Sri Lanka play India. Often a Sanath century was a highlight. The 151* in Mumbai, 189 in Sharjah were some of the stand outs during this period. However, since relinquishing leadership in 2003, Sanath’s inconsistencies with the bat became a topic of interest. In 2004 with pressure mounting the skipper Marvan Atapattu was adamant Sanath would come good soon during the Asia Cup in Colombo. Soon Sanath delivered a majestic century in losing cause in a must win game for India. The following period saw fluctuating fortunes for Sanath. Despite winning a game with a dislocated shoulder against India in Dambulla, a lean patch in a disastrous tour of India saw him being left out of a Sri Lankan squad for the first time towards end 2005. Sanath soon rose from the doldrums with a magnificent series against the English in 2006 which helped the audience witness the Matara mauler being reborn and serve Sri Lanka with supremacy till the end of the 2007 World Cup. However afterwards it was a plunge for Sanath. In 2008 Sanath’s place was hanging under the knife. A scintillating century for Mumbai Indians against Chennai Super kings in the inaugural IPL had given rays of hope. The Asia Cup in Pakistan in 2008 had the potential to be the end for Sanath if he failed to deliver. A century against a not so strong Bangladesh was never going to suffice in the long run. When Sri Lanka faced India in the final it was do or die for Sanath. The final is a game which is recollected for the Ajantha Mendis magic which scripted one of Sri Lanka’s best comeback wins. However, in the midst of it, the master blaster’s masterclass is often overlooked.
Having taken first lease of the wicket Sri Lanka got off to the worst possible start. Sanath sold down the river, his opening partner the consistent Sangakkara, who by now had taken over the mantle of being Sri Lanka’s leading batsman by sending him back halfway through a single. Despite the early setback Sanath was not deterred. He carried on his signature way flaying Ishant Sharma and RP Singh to all parts of the ground. Trademark square drives over cover, cuts through third man, pulls over square leg coupled with cute glanced down the leg meant Sri Lanka were off to a solid start. Sanath took a particular interest in Irfan Pathan smashing him for more than 15 runs in the eleventh over. However, a cluster for wickets at the other end meant the Indians were all over the Lankans like a rash. India had seen enough of Sanath in the past. Sanath ensured he reminded them of what was in store by galloping to his half century pulling an 86mPH short delivery from Ishant with disdain over square leg for a six. This was a 39-year-old in the twilight of his career smacking a young pace bowler who had wreaked havoc down under only a few months prior. It was not just a shot but a statement of supremacy. Sanath received a stroke of luck immediately afterwards as he survived an ugly cross batted shot off Ishant missing the stumps and RP Singh missing a skier at mid-on. RP Singh would soon rue the miss with what was to follow. What followed was carnage.
Jayausriya greeted Singh in the most disdainful manner dispatching his for two consecutive sixes over the bowler’s head and long off in the 16th over. The next two balls provided no response for the bowler as they were mercilessly manhandled by the master over covers for consecutive boundaries. As if leaving the leg side untouched was a shortcoming Jayasuriya closed the over with a six over square leg. The over fetched 26 runs and MS Dhoni and India knew the game was far from over. RP Singh was not the first Indian bowler to suffer at the hands of Sanath. Manoj Prabakar, Venkatesh Prasad all had suffered the wrath of Sanath’s willow. But what stood out was all of these bowlers belonged to different generation yet were not spared of Sanath’s mauling. A single batsman dishing out the same to bowlers across generations was truly admirable.
A gentle nudge down to square leg off Virender Sehwag helped Sanath to his 27th ODI century. It was a gentle nudge but there was nothing gentle about the knock. The sheer brutality of the knock was proven by the fact that his century came up in the 24th over and the team score was only 150. Sanath had notched 2/3 of the total score. Finally, when Sanath departed in the 36th over for 127 well-made runs he had scored more than 40% of the team total. A knock of such dominance in a final where the rest of the team faltered was true reflection of how good Jayasuriya was. Whilst Mendis dealt the killer punch later in the day Sanath’s contribution was truly magnificent.
This was not the first time, neither was it the last. Sanath would notch up his final international century in 2009 and another 99 the same year when his career was going down south. It was knocks of such nature with dominance that captured the attention of fans even in a passionate country like India. It is no surprise that his deeds are recollected even today with so much of adulation.
Sanath Jayasuriya was good enough to be loved in his own backyard. He was too good, not to be loved beyond the confines of his country. But being accepted to a coterie which cultivated cult following in a cricket mad nation like India, is the true testimony to the greatness Sanath Jayasuriya exhibited. In an era of social media where access to our favorites’ living rooms is just a fingertip, away being adored in foreign lands is still admirable. But to have achieved the same when even on field exploits were accessible only through print media and television was beyond remarkable. Sanath was not only a national but regional asset in his prime. Like the legacy of Richards, Bothams and Tendulkars, the legacy of Jayasuriya will live forever and we as Sri Lankan fans were truly blessed to have existed in an era to witness the master blaster’s brilliance.
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Sai Sudharsan and Prasidh lead Gujarat Titans to top of IPL table

B Sai Sudarshan and Prasidh Krishna once again stood up for Gujarat Titans (GT) as they beat Rajasthan Royals (RR) by 58 runs in Ahmedabad. This was GT’s fourth successive win in IPL 2025 and it took them to the top of the points table.
After RR opted to bowl on a red-soil pitch, Sai Sudharsan’s 82 off 53 balls, his third half-century of the season, steered GT to 217 for 6. With no dew in the second innings, it proved way too steep for RR to chase down. Mohammed Siraj and Arshad Khan struck in the powerplay before Prasidh picked up 3 for 24 in the middle overs to keep RR on the back foot. Despite Shimron Hetmyer’s fighting fifty, RR were all out for 159 in 19.2 overs.
Joffra Archer didn’t have a great start to IPL 2025. In his first two games, he conceded 109 from 6.3 wicketless overs. But he boucned back in his next two with a combined 4 for 38 from seven overs. He breathed fire tonight as well. In his first over, he rushed Sai Sudharsan with a 152.3kph bouncer. In his second, he got one to move in at 147.7kph and pegged back Shubman Gill’s off stump. His match-up against Gill in T20 cricket now reads: 15 balls, ten runs, three dismissals.
For his former captain Jos Buttler, Archer had two slips, a short leg and a catching square leg, and welcomed him with a menacing bouncer that Buttler did well to evade. Buttler inside-edged the next ball just wide of short leg, and then pushed Archer through the covers for four.
Sai Sudharsan generally takes time to get going. Here, he attacked right from the start. He ramped, scooped, drove and cut, and took his side to 50 in 5.1 overs. By the end of the powerplay, he had 39 against his name, off 22 balls. Only Wriddhiman Saha (54 vs Lucknow Super Giants in 2023) has scored more runs in an innings for GT in that phase.
Buttler was on 12 off 13 at one point but hit four fours in his next six balls to move to 31 off 19. He and Sai Sudharsan added 80 off 46 balls before Maheesh Theekshana trapped Buttler lbw. After a brief dip in the scoring rate, M Shahrukh Khan opened up and smashed 36 off 20 to re-inject momentum.
Sudharsan was dropped on 81 by Shubham Dubey off Archer in the 18th over, but he only added one more to his tally. Then Rahul Tewatia and Rashid Khan ransacked 30 in the last two overs to take GT past 200.
RR did not have a great start. Yashasvi Jaiswal slashed Arshad to deep third in the second over of the chase and Nitish Rana did the same against Siraj in the next. Sanju Samson and Riyan Parag counterattacked and added 48 off 26 balls for the third wicket. The stand was broken when Impact Sub Kulwant Khejroliya had Parag caught behind in the seventh over. Parag immediately reviewed the decision, confident that his bat had only hit the ground, but the third umpire thought otherwise, with Ultra Edge also bringing up a second spike when the ball passed the bat.
Coming into this game, Rashid had picked up just one wicket in four outings. Tonight, he struck in his first over. It was a shortish ball that didn’t bounce as much as Dhruv Jurel expected, and Sai Sudharsan at deep midwicket gobbled up the mistimed pull.
Rashid enjoys a favourable match-up against Hetmyer, having dismissed him six times in 63 balls for 79 runs before this game. He almost had Hetmyer lbw for a first-ball duck but the ball had pitched fractionally outside leg stump. From there on, Hetmyer dominated Rashid and hit him for 26 runs off 12 balls with the help of two fours and two sixes. However, Rashid was too good for RR’s Impact Sub Shubham Dubey and had him lbw for 1.
In his final over, the 16th over of the innings, Prasidh had Archer caught at mid-off and Hetmyer at deep-backward square leg, both off short balls. With RR 145 for 8 after 16 overs, the result was sealed. They dragged their innings into the final over but that did little to reduce the margin of their defeat.
Brief scores:
Gujarat Titans 217 for 6 in 20 overs (Sai Sudharsan 82, Jos Buttler 36, M Shahrukh Khan 36, Rahul Tewatia 24*, Rashid Khan 12; Joffra Archer 1-30, Tushar Deshpande 2-53, Sandeep Sharma 1-41, Maheesh Theekshana 2-54) beat Rajasthan Royals 159 (Shimron Hetmyer 52, Sanju Samson 41, Riyan Parag 26; Mohammed Siraj 1-30, Arshad Khan 1-19, Prasidh Krishna 3-24, Kulwant Khejroliya 1-29, Sai Kishore 2-20, Rashid Khan 2-37) by 58 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Birthday boy Manasa shines as Joes savour title

Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs Tournament
Speedster Manasa Madubashana celebrated his 19th birthday sharing four wickets each with spinner Yenula Dewthusa as St.Joseph’s sealed a comfortable 71 runs victory over Trinity in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs tournament final at Surrey Village ground on Wednesday.
Chasing 205 runs to win Trinity’s top order batsmen were rattled by Madubashana who took four wickets in a decisive seven over spell. He took wickets in consecutive balls in his second over to trigger a collapse from which Trinity never recovered.
The four wicket hauls by Madubashana and Dewthusa restricted Trinity to 133 runs. In their chase, Trinity lost wickets at reguler intervals and a laboured 48 runs from Sweath Anurajeewa only managed to delay the outcome till the 48th over. His innings came to an end when Madubashana held on to a regulation catch off the bowling of Aveesha Samash.
Earlier put to bat, St. Joseph’s too lost wickets at reguler intervals, but mini partnerships between Abishek Jayaweera and Senuja Wakunegoda (52 for the second wicket), and Jayaweera and Nimthaka Gunewardena (45 for the 3rd wicket) enabled them to stay aloft.
Gunawardena top scored with 47 runs, while skipper Kenath Liyanage played a vital role anchoring the tail with an unbeaten 29 runs.
The title victory capped a remarkable end to the Joes limited overs tournament campaign after having reached the knockout stage with only two victories under their belt.
by Reemus Fernando
Sports
Action from the Schools Relay Carnival

Schools Relay Carnival commenced at Diyagama on Wednesday. Here are some pictures from day one of the three-day championship.
(Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

Lyceum International Wattala were the winners of the Under 20 distance medley
relay. (From left) Himansi Pradeepani, Shalomi Rashni, Rashini Karunarathne
and Jithma Wijethunga.

.Under 20 boys medley relay winners, St. Benedict’s College, Kotahena. (From
left) Andrew Akash, Kalana Jayamanna, Kavindu Jayamanna and Denuth Nimesh.

Under 12 boys’ 4x100m relay winners, Maris Stella College. Negombo (From left) Tanujitha Weerasekara, Senith Ranasinghe, Milan Fernando and Denuth Thenujan.

Girls’ Under 12 4×50 metres relay winners, St. Bridget’s Convent, Colombo. (From left) Jenuli Perera, Sanah Fernando, Glesha Nanayakkara and Dehara Alwis.
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