Sports
De Kock, Miller, Ngidi to miss ODIs in Sri Lanka
South Africa will send a weakened squad into their men’s ODI series in Sri Lanka next month, which could complicate their attempts to book a place in the 2023 World Cup. But they will be back to full strength for the T20I rubber – their last engagement before the World Cup in that format in the UAE and Oman in October and November.
Quinton de Kock has been rested for the ODIs, which David Miller will miss with a hamstring injury. Lungi Ngidi is also out because of what CSA described in a release on Thursday as “personal reasons”. Bjorn Fortuin has been omitted from the group that were in Ireland last month. De Kock, Miller, Ngidi and Fortuin will return for the T20Is in Sri Lanka.
Junior Dala is the only new face in the ODI squad. Sisanda Magala, who limped home from the ODI series in the Caribbean in June with an ankle injury, is also in the T20I mix. Dwaine Pretorius has been named in both squads after recovering from Covid-19, which prevented him from visiting West Indies and Ireland.
Despite the presence of all of their stars in the ODIs against the Irish, South Africa lost one of the three games. Another was washed out. That left Temba Bavuma’s team in 10th place in the World Cup Super League standings. The top seven sides in March 2023 will earn places at that year’s World Cup, along with hosts India. Another two teams will come through a qualifying tournament. There’s a long way to go yet before the World Cup line-up is finalised but South Africa won’t want to leave points on the table.
They have had a largely successful few months, winning nine of the dozen matches they played across the formats in the Caribbean and Ireland. But their supporters will look for signs in Sri Lanka that they have returned to their hallmarks of quality fast bowling, dependable batting and aggressive fielding – which weren’t always apparent during their last two tours.
South Africa squads:
ODI:
Temba Bavuma (captain), Junior Dala, Beuran Hendricks, Reeza Hendricks, Heinrich Klaasen, George Linde, Janneman Malan, Keshav Maharaj, Aiden Markram, Wiaan Mulder, Anrich Nortje, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Rassie van der Dussen, Kyle Verreynne, Lizaad Williams.
T20I:
Temba Bavuma (captain), Quinton de Kock, Bjorn Fortuin, Beuran Hendricks, Reeza Hendricks, Heinrich Klaasen, George Linde, Keshav Maharaj, Sisanda Magala, Aiden Markram, David Miller, Wiaan Mulder, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortje, Dwaine Pretorius, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Rassie van der Dussen, Lizaad Williams.
Schedule
(all matches day/night at R. Premadasa stadium in Colombo)
ODIs:
September 2, 4 and 7.
T20Is:
September 10, 12 and 14.
(Cricbuzz )
Sports
India pass RPS Litmus Test with commanding win
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
Sports
Trinity make strong start after restricting Nalanda to 259
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)
Latest News
Nissanka ton stuns Australia, puts Sri Lanka in Super Eights
Sri Lanka survived an early onslaught to qualify for the 2026 T20 World Cup Super Eights, leaving Australia right at the exit door and hoping for a miracle.
The returning captain Mitchell Marsh and the returning-to-runs Travis Head were brutal in taking Australia to 104 in the first 50 legal deliveries, but some spectacular fielding and spin bowling helped Sri Lanka take 10 for 77 off the last 70 balls.
In front of a partying full house in Pallekele, Sri Lanka’s two most prolific batters, Pathum Nissanka and Kusal Mendis, brought out both the axe and paper cuts to slice through the chase. Nissanka, who had earlier dropped Glenn Maxwell and then dismissed him with a stunner, went on to score an unbeaten hundred and take Sri Lanka home with two overs to spare.
In the absence of Matheesha Pathirana, who walked off with a calf injury in his first over, their spinners contributed six wickets to go with excellent closing from Dushmantha Chameera. Australia’s lead spinner Adam Zampa, among the best T20 spinners of all time, took no wicket and was lucky to go for only 41 in his four overs.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 184/2 in 18 overs [Pathum Nissanka 100*, Kusal Mendis 51, Pavan Rathnayake 2*; Marcus Stoinis 2-41] beat Australia 181/10 in 20 overs [Mitchell Marsh 54, Travis Head 56, Josh Inglis 27, Glenn Maxwell 22; Dushmantha Chameera 2-56, Maheesh Theekshana 1-37, Dushan Hemantha 3-37, Dunith Wellalage 1-33, Kamindu Mendis 1-19] by eight wickets
[Cricinfo]
-
Life style2 days agoMarriot new GM Suranga
-
Business1 day agoMinistry of Brands to launch Sri Lanka’s first off-price retail destination
-
Features2 days agoMonks’ march, in America and Sri Lanka
-
Midweek Review6 days agoA question of national pride
-
Business6 days agoAutodoc 360 relocates to reinforce commitment to premium auto care
-
Opinion5 days agoWill computers ever be intelligent?
-
Features2 days agoThe Rise of Takaichi
-
Features2 days agoWetlands of Sri Lanka:
