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Sri Lanka commence World Under-20 Championship with mixed relay

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Sri Lanka’s athletes from left: Tharushi Karunaratne, Dilshan Bandara, Medhani Jayamanne, Isuru Kaushalya, Lakshima Mendis, Sithum Jayasundara and Shanika Lakshani.

Sri Lanka’s junior athletes will commence their World Under-20 Championship campaign when they make the country’s debut in mixed relay on day one of the event in Nairobi today.

Ananda Sastralaya Matugama sprinter Isuru Kaushalya, Wekada MV, Chilaw sprinter Dilshan Bandara, Ratnayaka Central, Walala runner Tharushi Karunaratne and Holy Cross College, Gampaha athlete Lakshima Mendis will form Sri Lanka’s mixed relay team. They will line up against, Jamaica, Czech Republic, India, Poland and Ethiopia in heat one of the 4×400 metres mixed relay, which will be the first discipline of the meet.

With only the first three finishers and the top two fastest finishers from the rest of the teams from the two heats advancing to the final Sri Lanka will have a tough ask qualifying. Nigeria, Italy, Kenya, South Africa and Ecuador are the teams competing in the other heat.

It is the first time that Sri Lanka compete in a mixed relay, the newest addition to track and field sports. The event won the global attention at the last World Championships in Doha and at the Tokyo Olympics. Sri Lanka’s senior athletes are yet to compete in a mixed relay after the Asian Relays and the Asian Athletics Championships were not held due to the Covid 19 pandemic.

Sri Lanka will bank heavily on the relay quartet to produce the best and book a final berth as there will be tougher competition in the individual events.

Lumbini College sprinter Medhani Jayamanne and Isuru Kaushalya will also compete in their individual events today.

Jayamanne will compete in the fourth heat of the women’s 100 metres while Kaushalya runs in heat two of the men’s 400 metres.

Jayamanne is drawn against sprinters from Jamaica, Bahamas, Italy, Czech Republic and Canada in her heat, with Jamaica’s Tina Clayton bringing a personal best of 11.17 seconds as the fastest of the heat. A personal best performance will be a realistic target for Jayamanne who clocked 11.85 seconds to qualify for the World event in July. Her coach, the South Asian Games medallist Umanga Surendra was hopeful that she would achieve her personal best mark in Nairobi.

Anthony Pesela of Botswana carries the fastest personal best (46.10 secs) to the men’s 400 metres second heat, while Zambia’s David Mulenga (46.14) and Nigeria’s Dubem Amene are the other serious contenders that Kaushalya has to fight against. Kaushalya has a personal best of 46.90 seconds from the last months’ selection trial. His coach Danushka Munasinghe backs him to do well in both the mixed relay and the individual event.

Dr. Dhammika Senenayake who is accompanying the team as the Covid 19 liaison officer told The Island that the athletes and the officials namely the manager Jagath Gnanasiri and coaches Umanga Surendra, Danushka Munasinghe and Sunethra Karunanayake have all returned negative results when tests were conducted for Covid 19. (RF)



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Spinners, Rawal seal big win for India

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Sneh Rana starred with three wickets [SLC]

A tight Sneh Rana spell put in motion a collapse Sri Lanka did not recover from, losing their last nine wickets for 93 runs.

This match had been shortened to 39-overs-a-side due to morning rains, but even so, a target of 148 was never really going to test a strong India batting order. Their top three hunted efficiently,  Pratika Rawal holding the chase together with 50 not out off 62 balls after Smriti Mandhana had provided a brisk start. India cruised home with nine wickets and 9.2 overs to spare.

Sri Lanka had at one point been 54 for 1, before Rana’s spell and some poor running sent the innings into a nosedive. Hasini Perera, opening the batting in place of Vishmi Gunaratne – who was not playing this game – top-scored with 30 runs. But with wickets falling frequently to the India spinners – who took seven in total – Sri Lanka never appeared to be headed to a competitive score.

Rana took 3 for 32 from her eight overs, with Deepti Sharma taking two wickets as well. Left-arm spinner N Sree Charani also struck twice in her first international match. There were four debutants in this match – two from each side – and Charani fared the best of them, the other three failing to take wickets.

It was the lbw of Hasini that kickstarted the collapse. Rana slid one into her pads, the ball likely going on to hit middle. Soon after that, a running mix-up cost Harshitha Samarawickrama her wicket, and Sri Lanka’s extremely shaky middle order was exposed.

Rana kept striking, taking two excellent return catches. The simpler of these was against Hansima Karunaratne who had come down the track only to hit the ball back to Rana who took a sharp chance at thigh height. Four overs later, she also took a low, dying chance to dismiss Nilakshika de Silva. Charani’s wickets both came from catches in the infield. Her maiden wicket, that of Kavisha Dilhari, came from a top-edged sweep.

India were dominant from the outset, with the bat. Mandhana was timing the ball particularly well, especially against Sri Lanka’s seamers. She favoured the legside in this innings, judging length quickly on a slow Khettarama deck, to pounce on the short ones. So dominant was she early on that although the score was 54 when she gave Inoka Ranaweera a return catch, she had scored 43 herself, off 46 balls.

Rawal was slower through the opening partnership, but confident nonetheless, as several of her drives suggested. Her fourth ODI half-century featured six fours, the prettiest of which was a cover drive off Dilhari in the ninth over.

Harleen Deol added another excellent score to her body of work at No. 3, where she has been batting of late. She was not out on 48 off 71 when India cruised home.

Brief scores:
India Women 149 for 1 in 29.4 overs (Pratika Rawal 50*, Harleen Deol 48*, Smriti Mandhana 43) beat Sri Lanka Women  147 in 38.1 overs (Hasini Perera 30, Kavisha Dilhari 25, Anushka Sanjeewani 22; Sneh Rana 3-31, Deepti Sharma 2-22, Shree Charani 2-26) by nine wickets

[Cricinfo]

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IPL2025: Arya and Prabhsimran shine but Punjab Kings suffer first-ever washout

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Prabhsimran Singh and Priyansh Arya put on 120 for the first wicket [Cricinfo]

Punjab Kings [PBKS] had to settle with just one point despite scoring 201 on a slow pitch as late-evening thunders showers washed out the chase in Kolkata. They will be disappointed for they had done the hard work on a pitch whose consensus reading was “very, very slow”. The one point moved PBKS to No. 4 on the points table while the lagging Kolkata Knight Riders rose to No. 7 with seven points from nine matches.

Outside the frustration of not getting the win, PBKS will be pleased with their openers, Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimrn Singhe, whose half-centuries took them to the daunting total in tough conditions. Especially how they scored the runs. They were almost obsessed with not over-hitting, holding their shape and relying more on their timing, adding 120 for the first wicket, PBKS’ only century stand this IPL. Arya scored 69 off 35, Prabhsimran 83 off 49, and even though the last six overs produced only 42, PBKS were confident they had scored an above-par total.

On the slow track with grip available for those bowling into the pitch, PBKS took 74 off the eight overs of spin between Varun Chakravarthy and Sunil Narine. Even Harshit Rana, KKR’s slower-ball specialist, was allowed to bowl only two overs for 27 runs.

Arya, in particular, was clever in his targeting of the bowlers. He took 50 off 20 balls of pace, and just 19 off 15 balls of spin. Prabhsimran took the spinners on, taking 41 off 22 balls bowled by them. Both of them were measured in the first couple of overs, getting used to the pace in the pitch, before targeting the pace bowlers. Arya preferred timing – his first four fours were driven between mid-off and cover – and Prabshimran struggled early, getting to only 34 off 32 at one point.

With an audacious switch-hit six off Narine, Prabhsimran turned his innings around, in the process consigning Narine to a 22-run over. His worst has been 23 in all T20 cricket. Prabhsimran scored 49 off the last 17 balls he faced; Shreyas Iyer managed only five in a 40-run stand with him.

That the death overs were not easy to hit only encouraged PBKS. Andre Russell managed reverse-swing, Narine and Varun conceded just 13 in their final overs, and Vaibhav Arora drew purchase when he bowled slower balls. PBKS were confident there wouldn’t be much dew either, but we never could find out.

Scores:
Punjab Kings 201 for 4 (Prabhsimran Singhe 83, Priyansh Arya 69, Vaibhav Arora 2-34, Varun Chakravarthy 1-39, Andre Russel 1-27) vs Kolkata Knight Riders 7 for 0 in 1 over Match abandoned

[Cricinfo]

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A Pope who played the game right

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Pope Francis (L) meets Diego Maradona at Paul VI Hall before the “Interreligious Match for Peace” at Olimpico Stadium, Rome, Sept. 1, 2014.

In 1978, when Pope John Paul II had a swimming pool installed at the Vatican, it made more than just a ripple. A few Cardinals raised eyebrows at the cost—after all, it wasn’t exactly a drop in the holy bucket. But when word reached the Pope, he waved away the murmurs with a smile and said, “Cheaper than a conclave.” For a man who lived and breathed his daily laps, it was a matter of staying afloat – literally and spiritually. John Paul II wasn’t just a man of prayer but also a man of play, once donning gloves as a goalkeeper in his native Poland.

When he elevated the Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, to the rank of Cardinal, he knew he was passing the torch to a kindred sporting soul. The two are said to have often bonded over football – a sacred ritual in Argentina almost as fervent as Mass itself.

Like many Argentine boys, Francis grew up with a football at his feet. But if you’re imagining a future Messi or Maradona in the making, think again. The young Jorge wasn’t quite dancing past defenders – he later admitted he had “hard feet,” and his friends didn’t let him forget it. Still, his love for the game never waned.

As Pope, Francis became a spiritual coach to athletes the world over. When meeting footballers at the Vatican, he preached the gospel of teamwork. “Football is a team sport. You can’t have fun alone. Teamwork leads to dream work,” he told them. “Team spirit nourishes both the mind and the heart, especially in a world overwhelmed by individualism.”

True to his roots, Francis remained a die-hard fan of San Lorenzo, the club founded in 1908 by Father Lorenzo Massa. The fans, affectionately known as “the Crows” (in honor of the founder’s black cassock), shared a special bond with their most famous supporter. The Pope held membership number 88,235 and faithfully paid his annual dues till the very end. Fittingly, the club now plans to name their new stadium after him – a tribute cast in stone for a man of faith and football.

Asked once to name the greatest among Pele, Messi, and Maradona, the Pope didn’t pull any punches. “Maradona as a player was great, but as a man, he failed,” he said, speaking truth with grace. It’s the same sentiment that most sports lovers share about the Argentine great, whose ‘hand of God’ sent England packing in the 1986 FIFA World Cup.

Yet when Maradona passed, Francis offered prayers for his fallen compatriot – a reminder that compassion, not condemnation, was his style of play.

To sportsmen chasing glory, Francis offered a word of caution. “Don’t let success go to your head,” he said. “Remember your journey – one of sacrifice, victories, and battles. True greatness lies not just on the scoreboard, but in how you live your life.”

In the wake of the Pope’s passing, both Argentina and Italy postponed their sporting events – a moment of silence for a voice that echoed across locker rooms as much as it did from pulpits.

Tributes came flooding in. Lionel Messi wrote, “You were a different, approachable Pope. Thank you for making the world a better place. We will miss you.” Gianluigi Buffon, Italy’s legendary goalkeeper, added, “Francis illuminated his era like only the greatest can. He moved our souls. I’ll carry his example forever in my heart.”

by Rex Clementine

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