Sports
Sri Lanka to begin campaign against Namibia
ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2021 schedule announced
Sri Lanka will open their campaign in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2021 against Namibia at the Abu Dhabi Stadium on October 18, it was confirmed yesterday as the ICC unveiled the schedule of the 16-team event. Sri Lanka are grouped with Ireland, Namibia and Netherlands in Round 1 and will take on Ireland and Netherlands on October 20 and 22.
Round 1 of the tournament, will begin with Oman playing Papua New Guinea followed by Bangladesh playing Scotland on October 17. Two teams from each group of Round 1 make it to the Super 12s, with Bangladesh, Oman, Papua New Guinea, and Scotland forming Group B.
The Super 12s will begin their contest on October 23 with Australia playing South Africa and England playing West Indies followed by archrivals India and Pakistan who will play against each other on 24 October.
Abu Dhabi will be the venue of the first semi-final on November 10 while the other semi-final (November 11) and the final (November 14) will be played in Dubai. All day matches are scheduled for 14h00 local time and the day-night matches are slated for 18h00 local time (+4 GMT).
Speaking on the tournament and fixtures, Sri Lankan Captain Dasun Shanaka said: “A T20 World Cup is always exciting for the players, fans, and all stakeholders who adore and love the game, and I am sure everybody is waiting for this tournament to take place, as do we as a team. A tournament of this nature helps popularize the game globally, as the short time span and the look and feel of the contest attracts the attention of the fans.”
Speaking on the players to watch out for Shanaka added: “Sri Lanka has players who can easily fit into a T20I team and deliver results. Our bowling is becoming potent, our batting has players who can build an innings and accelerate at key moments, whilst we are focusing big on our fielding as well. We do have several players in our present squad who can make an impact at any given time of the game, be it batting, bowling, or fielding. If I may name a few, Wanindu Hasaranga, who is among the top-ranked T20I bowlers, Kusal Janith Perera, who is an experienced wicket-keeper batsman, and Dushmantha Chameera, who looks extremely good with his bowling.”
Australian wicketkeeper and batter Alex Carey said: “I think the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup is really exciting! We have waited an extra twelve months for this one and to have it now in the schedule and see the draw that Australia has got is truly exciting.
“Anytime we get to play against England is exciting, we know how dominant they have been in the white ball format over the last few years. Coming up against the West Indies recently, we know how tough that can also be. So, we are really looking forward to this tournament.”
Defending champions West Indies captain Kieron Pollard said: “We are excited to begin defence of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup title later this year.
“T20 cricket is dynamic and the international scene is highly competitive, with players constantly pushing the boundaries of innovation and we are expecting a spectacular event in the UAE and Oman.
“We have particularly interesting Super 12 group, which sees us come up against Australia, England and South Africa. We can’t wait to get started!
“West Indian cricketers have always played an exciting brand of cricket and I am sure our fans in the Caribbean and all over the world are highly anticipating seeing us in action”.
South Africa Captain Temba Bavuma said: “The 2021 ICC T20 World Cup is of vital importance to the Proteas and South Africa as a nation. Not only is the T20 format a key part of Cricket South Africa’s strategy to introduce new fans to the game of cricket, but this tournament will also be the first of three opportunities for us to claim our first-ever ICC World Cup trophy.
“The group that we are in is an exciting one and we’re looking forward to facing off with everyone in it as we go about our mission to reach the final and the ultimate championship. We have an exciting team that we are building with a lot of raw talent, coupled with the experienced hands that will guide and lead the youngsters.
“We have spent the greater part of the year preparing for this contest and I look forward to leading our country in my first world showpiece as captain.”
England Captain, Eoin Morgan said: “The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup is going to be brilliant. The standard of T20 cricket around the world is improving exponentially and every nation has a chance of becoming World Champions. It should be one of the closest and most competitive world tournaments to date and we can’t wait to get started.”
About the ICC Men’s T20
World Cup 2021
The seventh edition of the tournament comprises 16 teams and is being hosted by India in the United Arab Emirates and Oman
The tournament is being played at four venues – Dubai International Stadium, Oman Cricket Academy (Muscat), Sharjah Cricket Stadium and Zayed Cricket Stadium (Abu Dhabi)
Hosts India and nine other top teams in the MRF Tyres ICC Men’s T20I Player Rankings as of 31 December 2018 got direct entries
The top eight were placed directly in the Super 12s and the next two – Sri Lanka and Bangladesh – joined six other teams coming through a Qualifier event in the group stage
Two teams each from the group stage, consisting of four teams each, will join the eight direct entrants to complete the Super 12s line-up.
If Sri Lanka and Bangladesh qualify from the first round, they will retain the seedings of A1 and B1 respectively for the Super 12s
The top two teams from each group of the Super 12s will make the knockouts, the matchups being – A1 v B2 and B2 v A1.
The groupings:
Round 1
Group A:
Sri Lanka, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Namibia
Group B:
Bangladesh, Scotland, Papua New Guinea, and Oman
(Top two teams from each group advance to Super 12s)
Super 12s
Group 1:
England, Australia, South Africa, West Indies, A1 and B2.
Group 2:
India, Pakistan, New Zealand, Afghanistan, A2 and B1.
(Top two teams from each group advance to the semi-finals)
Complete fixtures of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup hosted by India in UAE and Oman:
Round 1
17 Oct:
Oman v Papua New Guinea, Muscat (14h00); Bangladesh v Scotland, Muscat (18h00)
18 Oct:
Ireland v Netherlands, Abu Dhabi (14h00); Sri Lanka v Namibia, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
19 Oct:
Scotland v Papua New Guinea, Muscat (14h00); Oman v Bangladesh, Muscat (18h00)
20 Oct:
Namibia v Netherlands, Abu Dhabi (14h00); Sri Lanka v Ireland, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
21 Oct:
Bangladesh v Papua New Guinea, Muscat (14h00); Oman v Scotland, Muscat (18h00)
22 Oct:
Namibia v Ireland, Sharjah (14h00); Sri Lanka v Netherlands, Sharjah (18h00)
Super 12
23 Oct:
Australia v South Africa, Abu Dhabi (14h00); England v West Indies, Dubai (18h00)
24 Oct:
A1 v B2, Sharjah (14h00); India v Pakistan, Dubai (18h00)
25 Oct:
Afghanistan v B1, Sharjah (18h00)
26 Oct:
South Africa v West Indies, Dubai (14h00); Pakistan v New Zealand, Sharjah (18h00)
27 Oct:
England v B2, Abu Dhabi (14h00); B1 v A2, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
28 Oct:
Australia v A1, Dubai (14h00)
29 Oct:
West Indies v B2, Sharjah (14h00); Pakistan v Afghanistan, Dubai (18h00)
30 Oct:
South Africa v A1, Sharjah (14h00); Australia v England, Dubai (18h00)
31 Oct:
Afghanistan v A2, Abu Dhabi (14h00); India v New Zealand, Dubai (18h00)
1 Nov:
England v A1, Sharjah (18h00)
2 Nov:
South Africa v B2, Abu Dhabi (14h00); Pakistan v A2, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
3 Nov:
New Zealand v B1, Dubai (14h00); India v Afghanistan, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
4 Nov:
Australia v B2, Dubai (14h00); West indies v A1, Abu Dhabi (18h00)
5 Nov:
New Zealand v A2, Sharjah (14h00); India v B1, Dubai (18h00)
6 Nov:
Australia v West Indies, Abu Dhabi (14h00); England v South Africa, Sharjah (18h00)
7 Nov:
New Zealand v Afghanistan, Abu Dhabi (14h00): Pakistan v B1, Sharjah (18h00)
8 Nov:
India v A2, Dubai (18h00)
10 Nov:
Semi-final 1 (A1 v B2), Abu Dhabi (18h00)
11 Nov:
Semi-final 2 (B1 v A2), Dubai (18h00)
14 Nov:
Final, Dubai (18h00)
Latest News
History takes centre stage as Mandhana, Harmanpreet fifties steer India
On Friday at Lord’s, they were standing on the shoulders of giants.
In the broader scheme of progress, there have arguably been bigger occasions for the women’s game – not least, the one that took place at this same venue only five days earlier. None, however, have come loaded with quite this much portent. After a lag of 142 years, dating back to 1884 when Lord’s hosted England and Australia for the first of what is now 150 men’s Tests and counting, the women are finally off the mark at the self-styled home of cricket.
On a day of historic firsts, England’s Laurem Bell duly bowled the first delivery in a women’s Test at Lord’s, before Lauren Filer claimed the first wicket. And, for a time during the afternoon session, while India’s third-wicket partnership was bedding into its surroundings and recalibrating to the demands of a rarely-accessed format, it seemed inevitable thatSmriti Mandhana would land the most coveted first of all – a place on the dressing-room honours boards, designated as of this morning as unisex, no matter what the weight of precedent might suggest.
Instead, on 83, Mandhana was lured outside her eyeline by an Issy Wong outswinger, and traipsed off with her own slice of the occasion unfulfilled. And yet, on this day of all days, it somehow felt apt that the wait was made to go on a little while longer. If, as is customary, the opening session of a Test can often be given to the bowlers, then this opening day was handed over to the mighty names of the past, whose endeavours have paved the way for the 22 names who made this final cut of history.
Prior to the start of play, more than 50 former England players made the journey through the Long Room and down the pavilion steps, to line up on the outfield for the national anthems. Among their number was the indomitable Enid Blackwell, 85 years young and sporting a bruise on her shin from wicketkeeping duties in a recreational game only last week. To her fell the honour of ringing the five-minute bell, surrounded by her fellow veterans from England’s maiden ODI on this ground, against Australia in August 1976, almost exactly 50 years ago.
As legend has it, Bakewell’s captain on that day, Rachel Heyhoe-Flint, chose to lead her team onto the field via the Committee Room side-door, so as not to offend the sensibilities of those MCC members whose seminal vote to admit women to their club would have to wait for a further 22 years.
Heyhoe-Flint could scarcely have imagined, back then, that her official portrait would preside over such an occasion from the Long Room wall, or that Bakewell herself would unveil her own painting on the morning of the match – one of six new additions to the MCC’s collection, which at a stroke trebled the female inventory of one of the most famous private art galleries in the world.
Those other names includedMary Duggan, to this day the leading wicket-taker in women’s Tests, with 77 at 13.49, though who in all honesty would have held this fact in their fingertips? Likewise, Myrtle Maclagan, the first woman to take a Test wicket, at Brisbane in 1934, and the first to three figures too, and Janette Brittin – arguably more familiar for her role in the 1993 World Cup triumph, which was separately celebrated in a larger work of art – though less of a household name than her record deserved.
It was against such a wealth of context that Nat Sciver-Brunt won the toss and chose to bowl first. It was a sweltering day, and there was perhaps a misleading tinge of green in the surface. But, with the match coming just five days after England’s heartbreak in the T20 World Cup final, Sciver-Brunt could have been forgiven if there was a defensive reflex in her decision-making.
This was England’s chance to walk through the Long Room as a collective in their whites, and settle into the occasion together. And they did so with admirable verve. Filer’s first wicket of the contest was a collector’s item, fit to grace any one of those 150 men’s Tests – 72mph, nipping back up the slope, and kissing the shoulder of Shafali Verma’s bat for Amy Jones to gather well to her right.
It was the first of a succession of outstanding individual moments from England’s bowlers. Bell’s inswinging, away-seaming delivery to Yastika Bhatia was another moment to savour, as was Mady Villiers’ debut dismissal of India’s captain, Harmanpreet Kaur, for 58 on the stroke of tea. Tossed up on a good length outside off, dipping and gripping through the gate to peg back middle stump. It had shades of another memorable Anglo-Indian moment from nearly a quarter-of-a-century ago – Michael Vaughan’s stunning offbreak to Sachin Tendulkar at Trent Bridge – and at 202 for 5, it was sufficient to ensure at least a share of the spoils of the first two sessions.
The difficulties for England came in between whiles, though it was by no means an isolated problem. As the soon-to-be-retired Tammy Beaumont had pointed out in the lead-up to this match, the crazy expectation of this shoe-horned Great Exhibition was for both sides to forget the drills that had driven them throughout the recent T20 World Cup, and turn on a dime to a format that they tend to play once every 18 months if they are lucky.
The initial pace of the contest was, understandably enough, a long way removed from the standard red-ball tempo. By the time Jemimah Rodrigues dragged a Wong outswinger onto her stumps for 35 from 38 balls, India had clattered along to 101 for 3 in 19 overs, against a bowling attack that struggled to locate that requisite holding line and length for the long-form game.
By the time of her pearler to Bhatia, Bell had been pumped for six fours in three overs and so celebrated with more of a grimace than the moment deserved, while both Ecclestone and Wong were clubbed at a T20 tempo from the start of their respective spells, including Mandhana’s slog-swept six en route to a run-a-ball half-century.
As India’s innings took root, however, so the tempo slowed – partially out of respect for the occasion and the recognition of the rewards for playing the long game, partially thanks to some improved discipline from England’s bowlers, not least the offspin of Villiers, who bowled her 19 overs without change from the Nursery End, save a 20-minute break for tea.
Harmanpreet suffered rather more in that period, with several breaks in play for cramp prior to her dismissal, and Villiers earned further reward in the evening session, when Sneh Rana missed a sweep and was somehow given not-out on the field by umpire Sue Redfern. England’s review showed there had been little room for doubt.
There was a touch more reason for Sayali Satghare to feel aggrieved when Ecclestone extracted the on-field decision from Anna Harris for a slider that was shown to be clipping leg, by which stage Wong had claimed a fine low catch at fine leg, as Filer sprung the short-ball trap on Richa Ghosh – another moment of proper fast bowling from a player who would surely thrive in this format given a more frequent chance to do so.
Deepti Sharma would surely do likewise. She marshalled India’s lower-order in her typically combative manner for 57 from 87 balls, and though Ecclestone rounded up the tail for figures of 3 for 68, their total of 285 felt more than adequate on a surface that appears already to be gripping for the spinners.
Before the close, England’s bid for initial parity had taken a hit with the early extraction of Beaumont, trapped lbw by a Kranti Gaud inswinger for 2. She’ll have another chance to bow out of her own mighty career on a higher note than that. But, simply to have made the cut that eluded so many before her will suffice as reward for now. It was that sort of a day at the game’s grandest venue.
Scores:
England Women 21 for 1 in 11 overs (Mark Bouchier 17*; Kranti Gaud 1-08) trail India Women 285 in 74.5 overs (Smriti Mandhana 83, Harmanpreet Kaur 58, Deepti Sharma 57; La0uren Filer 2-40, Sophie Ecclestone 3-68, Issy Wong 2-41, Maddy Villiers 2-79) by 264 runs
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Spain leave it late to book semifinal date with France
Mikel Merino scored in the 88th minute from a rebound yielded by backup Belgium goalkeeper Senne Lammens, and Spain advanced to the World Cup semifinals with a 2-1 victory.
Merino was the late hero for the second straight match for Spain, who advanced to face tournament favourite France in the semifinals on Tuesday in Dallas.
Merino came on in the 86th minute and scored from his second touch of the match, charging into the box and pouncing after Lammens spilled a Pau Cubarsi shot from outside the area.

The Arsenal forward also scored as a substitute early in injury time to secure Spain’s 1-0 victory over Portugal in the last-16.
Lammens, the Manchester United keeper, was forced into the match in the 71st minute after longtime Belgium keeper Thibaut Courtois left with an apparent thigh injury.
Belgium desperately pressed for an equaliser in the final minutes, but Aymeric Laporte volleyed their best chance out of the box.
Fabian Ruiz scored the opening goal in the 30th minute for Spain after Courtois had parried a shot from Dani Olmo from Pedro Porro’s cut-back from the right of the area, but Belgium forward Charles De Ketelaere scored the first goal allowed by Spain in the entire World Cup in the 41st minute.
His header from Timothy Castagne’s cross from the right ended a record streak of 649 minutes without conceding at the World Cup.

Sports
Dharmaraja and Kingswood set for historic rugby clash today
The annual rugby encounter between Dharmaraja College and Kingswood College, played for the William Weerasinghe Memorial Trophy, is set to take place today (July 11, 2026), at 4:00 PM at the Bogambara Stadium, Kandy.
The official unveiling of the trophy took place this week at the Dharmaraja College premises with the participation of the Principals of the two schools, teachers-in-charge of sports, coaches, the Rugby teams, and several distinguished guests, including Dharmaraja College Old Boys’ Association President Mahesh Wijetunga, Kingswood College Old Boys’ Association President Muditha Abeykoon,
Text and Pic by SK Samaranayake
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