Connect with us

Sports

Dhananjaya drags Sri Lanka to 241

Published

on

Dhananjaya de Silva came up with a vital 91 to drag Sri Lanka to 241/9 in the second ODI at the Oval on Thursday (July 1). At one stage, it appeared as if the visitors would struggle to even touch three figures after Sam Curran struck thrice with the new ball in front of his home crowd to leave Sri Lanka reeling at 21/4. Eventually, the youngster went on to collect his first five-fer in ODI cricket with Sri Lanka also making a commendable comeback, which is still unlikely to prevent them from going 2-0 down in the series.

The Sri Lankans were rocked very early in the game after England opted to field first as Sam trapped Kusal Perera leg-before-wicket. Losing the captain, who top-scored in the first ODI, for a duck was a massive blow and the seamer hardly gave them any breathing space by striking again after two balls. Avishka Fernando fell prey to a sharp inswinger and was dismissed lbw as well. To make matters worse, both Kusal and Avishka ended up wasting two reviews while getting dismissed. Another inswinger from the left-armer accounted for Pathum Nissanka’s wicket in just the fourth over and David Willey opened his account shortly as well with Charith Asalanka mistiming a pull in tame fashion.

At 21/4, the visitors were badly in need of a partnership with a familiar story unfolding. Dhananjaya then found an able partner in Wanindu Hasaranga as the duo began rebuilding. Dhananjaya, who has been looking to cement his spot in the ODI XI, did his chances no harm as he kept picking up boundaries to get the scorecard moving. He played some exquisite shots off the seamers punishing anything that was bowled full and short as well. Hasaranga, who was watchful at the other end with Dhananjaya doing the bulk of the scoring, finally found his groove as he picked up a couple of boundaries off Sam to bring up the half-century stand.

The left-arm seamer persisted with a short-ball ploy against Hasaranga despite getting pulled for a boundary once but his patience did yield in a wicket eventually. Against the run of play, Hasaranga took on the short ball only to find the fielder at deep midwicket. It was then Dasun Shanaka’s turn to aid Dhananjaya as the two batsmen began guiding Sri Lanka to safety. Shanaka had to curb his natural instincts with plenty of overs left in the innings but did chip in with timely boundaries. Dhananjaya on the other hand continued to look fluent, went past his highest ODI score, and was on course to getting to his maiden hundred before a lapse in concentration resulted in his downfall.

Just nine short of three figures, the right-hander pulled Willey but failed to connect it to perfection and was caught by Joe Root near deep square leg. With Shanaka also getting dismissed before he could open up, Sri Lanka had to settle for a par score of 241 but they have certainly given their bowlers something to fight for which looked unlikely after the first 20 minutes of play.

 

Brief scores:

Sri Lanka

241/9 in 50 overs (Dhananjaya de Silva 91, Dasun Shanaka 47; Sam Curran 5-48, David Willey 4-64 )



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Lanka Premier League draft set to take place on March 22

Published

on

By

The sixth edition of the LPL will take place in July-August 2026 [Cricinfo]

There will be no auction for this year’s Lanka Premier League, Sri Lanka Cricket has announced, with a player draft set to take place instead on March 22.

The sixth edition of the LPL had originally been slated for early December 2025, but was postponed on account of ensuring the readiness of venues for the 2026 World Cup set to be co-hosted by Sri Lanka and India. The league has since been scheduled to take place from July 8 to August 8, which is the SLC’s preferred window.

This will be the first time since 2022 that a draft system is being utilised in the LPL, with both of the past two seasons hosting player auctions.

“During the draft, franchises will select both Sri Lankan and overseas players for the upcoming season of Sri Lanka’s premier domestic T20 tournament,” an SLC media release confirmed.

The inclusion of a sixth team had also been mooted prior to the competition’s postponement, however there have been no developments on that front since. Each of the first five editions of the LPL saw five teams representing Colombo, Galle, Kandy, Dambulla and Jaffna compete.

Earlier this year, Jaffna Kings – formerly the longest-standing franchise, having joined in the tournament’s second edition – and Colombo Strikers were terminated by SLC for “failure to uphold contractual obligations.” As a result, the LPL currently has no franchise owners with a history stretching back beyond 2024. New owners for both the Jaffna and Colombo teams are yet to be announced.

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Sports

Hasaranga backs Sri Lanka for World Cup semi-final push

Published

on

Sri Lanka’s leg-spin spearhead Wanindu Hasaranga has warned rivals not to write off the hosts ahead of the World Cup, after his four-wicket burst in the final T20I against Pakistan helped Sri Lanka square the three-match series on Sunday.

Hasaranga’s spell turned the game on its head and restored belief in a side that has blown hot and cold. Speaking after being named Player of the Match and Player of the Series, the leg-spinner said Sri Lanka, buoyed by home conditions, remain very much in the hunt for a semi-final berth.

Under head coach Sanath Jayasuriya, Sri Lanka have made steady strides over the past 18 months. There have been a few distractions recently like changes in selectors and captaincy among them, but the dressing room, Hasaranga insisted, is quietly confident.

“We know the conditions and we’ve grown up playing in these conditions,” Hasaranga said. “If we use them well, we can have a major impact. Players need to identify their roles. Once that happens, we can put on a good show.”

Sunday’s decider was reduced to 12 overs a side after rain delayed the start by more than two hours, but Hasaranga felt the shortened contest still offered valuable lessons.

“Today we looked good,” he said. “We’ve been lacking a bit of consistency in recent years. In a World Cup, you have to minimise mistakes and keep moving forward.”

Bowling with a wet ball tested the spinners’ skills and patience, but Hasaranga viewed it as useful match practice rather than an inconvenience.

“It was challenging with a wet ball,” he explained. “But it’s good these things happen before a World Cup. It prepares you for all kinds of situations. I even spoke to our batters about what deliveries they’d prefer to face, and that input helped when we went out to defend.”

Sri Lanka now enjoy a week’s breather before hosting England with Hasaranga keen to see his side peak at the right time.

“When this series started, we had six games leading into the World Cup,” he said. “Rain in Dambulla meant things didn’t always go to plan. As a team, we wanted winning momentum. There are only a couple of games left now and we need to be firing on all cylinders when the World Cup begins.”

Sri Lanka had stumbled in the opener, losing by six wickets after being bowled out inside 20 overs, while the second match was washed out without a toss. A 14-run win in the final game, however, ensured honours ended even.

Rex Clementine
in Dambulla

Continue Reading

Sports

Sunil Gunawardana among contenders for top post of Sri Lanka Athletics

Published

on

It will be a four-way battle for the top post of Sri Lanka Athletics as fresh nominations for the election of office bearers closed at the Sports Ministry on Monday. Former president Sunil Gunawardana, Bimal Wijesinhge, Sugath Kumara and Prasanna Indika are the nominees for the post of president and they are subjected to objections.

‎This is the second time the Ministry of Sports called for nominations after different stakeholders successfully challanged the earlier niminations alleging that there were errors in the process.

‎Informed sources said that this time too the Ministry of Sports has left enough room for allegations as it announced the names of the nominees without waiting for the nominations sent by post.

‎”There was a fundamental error as they did not wait for nominations sent by post. They informed the stake holders by post. Some member federations had received the letters only on last Thursday. They were in a mighty hurry to announce the names of the nominees soon after the nominations closed,” a source close to athletics told The Island.

‎Following are the nominees for various posts of Sri Lanka Athletics.

‎‎President: Sunil Gunawardana, Bimal Wijesinhge, Prasanna Indika, Sugath Kumara

‎‎Vice President: Prasanna Indika, Lal Chandrakumara, Lt. Col. G.N. Jayathilaka, Irangani Rupasinghe, Jagath Silva, G.J. Siyamudali, Prasanna Aluvihare

‎Secretary: Dr. Dhammika Senanayake, Sameera Perera, Madawa Herath

Asst. Secretary: Sameera Perera, Aloy Wickramasinghe (RF)

Continue Reading

Trending