Sports
Susal, Sanudula give respite for hosts
Asian Junior Chess Championships 2021
Promising youth player Susal de Silva and young talent Sanudula Dahamdi gave the hosts some respite as they did well to score points on day six of the Asian Junior Chess Championships 2021 continued at Citrus Hotel, Waskaduwa on Wednesday.
Susal drew his game against V.S. Rahul, the leading player of the championship. Susal earned half a point with his draw as Rahul continued to lead. Rahul had thus far beaten all leading players. Susal is now tied for fourth place with Gholami Orimi of Iran (with 5 ½ points each).
Indian International Master, G.B. Harshawardhana beat Indian International Master Vardaan Nagpal to close the gap he had with Rahul to ½ a point. He has 6 ½ points against his name. Harshawardhana will meet top seed Indian IM, Mitrabha Guha in the final round today. Mitrabha also came back strongly to beat Indian International Master Shrihari Ragunandan in the eighth round yesterday. He has six points and is in the third position. Mitrabha is the Indian National Chess Champion.
Musaeus College player Dahamdi did well in the eighth and penultimate round to draw her game against Indian Women International Master Savitha Shri, who headed the table throughout. The draw in their game resulted in Indian Women International Master K. Priyanka taking the lead in the points table.
Dahamdi and Anousha Mahdian of Iran are sharing 5 ½ points each but Sanudula is in the third position due to her better tie-breaker. Sanudula will meet Anousha in the final round where the bronze medal is likely to be decided.
Sports
SSC-Yeti Tennis Tourney from January 9
The Yeti-SSC Open Tennis Championship, one of the most prestigious and long-standing national tennis tournaments, will be held from January 9 to 25 at the SSC Courts in Maitland Place.
The 2026 Yeti-SSC Open Championship will feature a comprehensive line-up of events including Boys’ and Girls’ Singles and Doubles (Under-12 to Under-18), Men’s and Women’s Singles, Doubles and Mixed Doubles as well as Veterans categories (Over 35, 45 and 55).
The SSC Open Championships are officially recognised as a Category 1 National Ranking Tournament sanctioned by the Sri Lanka Tennis Association (SLTA) and traditionally mark the commencement of Sri Lanka’s annual competitive tennis calendar.
The 2026 edition is expected to draw more than 1,000 junior and senior participants, further reinforcing its position as one of the country’s most eagerly awaited tennis events.
The tournament is set to showcase thrilling performances from leading national players including the current Men’s national champion Apna Perera, Women’s national champion Dinara De Silva, Davis Cup players Ashen Silva and Thehan Wijemanne, as well as top-ranked juniors such as Ganuka Fernando (Boys’ Under-18) and Sandithi Usgodaarachchi(Girls’ Under-18), among many other prominent competitors.
Sports
Seba force a draw after Joes dominate
Under 19 Cricket
An unbeaten century in the first innings and a half century in the second by Adesh Almeida and valuable contributions in the second innings from Koshendra Fernando and Chamath Wellalage helped St. Sebastians’ force a draw to their Under 19 encounter against St. Joseph’s at Moratuwa on Tuesday.
Nushan Perera and Vishwa Peiris were responsible for most of the damage as they took theJoes almost close to an innings victory.
Forced to follow on, the Sebs were heading for a possible defeat but number ten batsman Navinu Fernando kept his cool to bat through to the finish. He faced more than 20 balls to score four runs not out.
Match Results
Sebs force a draw at Moratuwa
Scores
St. Joseph’s 344 all out in 79.1 overs
(Yenula Danthanarayana 74, Aveesha Samash 52, Rishma Amarasinghe 90, Chethina Kavinda 70, Dilpa Ruwanaka 28; Koshendra Fernando 5/115, Shenash Hashein 3/51, Navinu Fernando 2/65)
St. Sebastians’ 37 for 3 overnight 192 all out in 59.1 overs (Adesh Almeida 105n.o., Koshendra Fernando 45; Nushan Perera 6/38, Disinu Samarasinghe 2/68,
Vishwa Peiris 2/58) and 151 for 9 in 54 overs (Chamath Wellalage 33, Adesh Almeida 50, Koshendra Fernando 22; Nushan Perera 3/59, Vishwa Peiris 6/50)
Petes earn first innings points against Royal at Bambalapitiya
Scores
Royal 347 all out in 80 overs
(Rehan Peiris 125, Thevindu Wewalwala 20, Manuth Dasanayake 71, Himaru Deshan 58; Thenura Dissanayake 2/74, Janith Panditharathne 6/103) and 71 for no loss in 22 overs
St. Peter’s 54 for 2 overnight 361 for 6 in 80 overs
(Asadisa de Silva 134, Shavidu Silva 53, Joshua Sebastian 93, Enosh Peterson 31n.o., Sadeesha Silva 33n.o.; Sehandu Sooriyaarachchi 3/50, Ramiru Perera 2/98)
No decision at Asgiriya
Scores
Trinity 153 all out in 52.3 overs (Praveen Mithila 47, Santhosh Kritheekshan 34; Geeth Sandaruwan 3/33, Thenuja Rashmin 3/35, Venura Kaveethra 2/34)
Mahanama 5 for 1 overnight 101 for 3 in 37 overs
(Venura Kaveethra 42n.o., Sanul Weerarathne 32n.o., Kaushika Thilakarathne 19)
Cambrians take first innings honours against Nalanda at Campbell Place
Scores
Nalanda 226 all out in 79 overs
(Nadul Jayalath 25, Santhul Wijerathna 46, Nemindu Akmeemana 27, Osanda Pamuditha 66, Dunitha Anusara 40; Nadul Aponso 6/53, Nethul Anuhas 4/67) and 101 for 7 in 33 overs (Shehan Ashein 5/20)
Prince of Wales 50 for no loss overnight 303 for 9 in 80 overs
(Palingu Perera 33, Suwas Fernando 63, Oshan de Silva 43, Gaveesha Fernando 59, Pasan Cooray 51; Osanda Pamuditha 2/32, Malsha Fernando 2/65) (RF)
Latest News
Head and Smith centuries grind England in the SCG dirt
Travis Head departed the SCG field to a thunderous ovation after his latest demolition of England in this Ashes series. But the roars from the terraces soon deafened when Usman Khawaja walked to the crease in his final Test match.
After Head’s belligerent 163 off 166 balls, his third century in what has been a remarkable series, Khawaja – batting at No.6 – could not produce a fairytale innings against a flagging England attack in the Sydney sunshine.
In what might prove to be his final Test innings, Khawaja fell for 17 in an ungainly dismissal – a low full-toss from Brydon Carse – and left the ground to more hearty applause.
Skipper Steven Smith then stole the show for the remainder of day three with an unbeaten 129 off 205 balls to put Australia in a commanding position as they seek a convincing 4-1 series victory.
Australia appear to have broken England’s spirit in an innings stretching 124 overs. Their first-innings lead has ballooned to 134 runs and looks particularly significant with uneven bounce becoming notable and cracks set to widen amid warm weather in Sydney.
Smith wasn’t at his most fluent, but looked locked in from the get go with his usual theatrics at the crease on full display. He even at one point asked Carse at mid-off to put his sunglasses on the back of his hat due to the reflection.
Smith feasted on wayward England bowling and also made a point to be aggressive against spinners Will Jacks and Jacob Bethell. A 37th Test century and 13th against England almost felt inevitable as he ended a relatively lean series in style, kissing his helmet in celebration late in the day.
Smith moved into second all-time on the Ashes run scorers and century list, with only Sir Donald Bradman ahead on both fronts.
His first home Ashes hundred since the 2017-18 series has tightened Australia’s grip on the match. They were aided by shabby bowling and fielding from England, who dropped four catches in the first session with Smith being reprieved on 12 by Zak Crawley at leg-slip just before lunch.
The early part of the day was dominated by Head, who had only just fallen short of scoring a century in an elongated final session on day two, but it didn’t take him long to reach his 12th Test ton.
After resuming on 91, Head completed his 105-ball century just 25 minutes into the day’s play and he celebrated by sticking his helmet on top of his bat handle as he once again had the crowd in the palm of his hands.
It ended Head’s modest record at the SCG as he became the fifth player to score tons at seven different venues in Australia.
Head received strong support from Michael Neser, who was used wisely as the nightwatcher ahead of Scott Boland after the latter performed the role in the previous Test.
Neser showed off his batting credentials, having made 4000 career runs in first-class cricket with five centuries. He frustrated England with solid defence and the occasional boundary to grind down the beleaguered tourists.
Head continued his rampant form from the previous afternoon when he inflicted more pain on hapless seamer Maththew Potts, whose Ashes debut has turned into a nightmare.
A new day did not bring an improved showing with Potts immediately smashed for three consecutive fours by a ruthless Head. England continued to persist with short-ball plans, even to Neser, and it almost paid off when Head skied Carse to deep midwicket only for Jacks to drop a sitter, taking his eyes off the ball as he was seemingly worried about the nearby boundary cushion.
Not only did it prove costly for England, Jacks had the further ignominy of receiving mocked cheers from the Australian fans when he subsequently fielded.
Head in the next over had another lucky escape when Carse dropped a much tougher chance at deep third but it only left Potts feeling even more aggrieved.
For all their focus on hitting a shorter length, Carse finally dislodged Neser with a superb outswinger that was caught behind to end the 72-run partnership.
Potts’ century was brought up when Head launched him into the crowd as England’s miserable session continued. Head did attempt to settle himself down having not quite recaptured his formidable batting from the previous day while Smith started in scratchy fashion.
Capping a forgettable morning for England, Smith was dropped at leg-slip by Crawley in a sharp chance down to his left to deny Josh Tongue another wicket against the Australia captain. Jacks’ woes continued when he could not hang on to a bullet from Head that was rifled back to him in the final over before lunch.
Head eyed a maiden double century but his hoodoo of getting out between 150-175 continued shortly after the interval when he missed a premeditated sweep and fell lbw to Bethell with his review proving unsuccessful.
After letting Head get his moment in the sun as he acknowledged the fans, Khawaja stepped onto the field amid a loud ovation but the game then went through a rare lull this series.
Khawaja and Smith played watchfully, with Ben Stokes pushing his battered body in a lionhearted spell with the old ball. Having been the most consistent and threatening bowler of an inexperienced attack, it was curious that Stokes decided not to have a breather until the second new ball.
Having sprayed the ball to start the innings, Potts and Carse were thrown the second new ball too, which did offer some swing as Australia closed in on England’s first innings total.
Khawaja made just 10 off his first 40 deliveries before briefly winding back the clock with a gorgeous drive down the ground off Potts. England once again appeared to be unravelling with Carse curiously bowling over the wicket despite Khawaja’s last 12 dismissals to right-arm pace being from around the wicket.
But Khawaja missed a full toss from Carse and then unwisely decided to review with ball-tracking confirming it was smashing the bottom of the middle stump. The crowd again rose, but there was no big wave of the bat for Khawaja and time will tell if he bats again in his Test career.
Alex Carey looked in glorious touch before on 16 glancing Tongue to leg-slip – the third time in four innings he has fallen in that manner. Cameron Green, batting at No.8, entered under enormous pressure having found himself being unable to convert starts and repeatedly falling in unusual ways.
Green started well with a glorious drive then pulled Stokes into the crowd as he moved to 37 in good time. But the critics will again be lining up after Green threw it away when he spooned a short Carse delivery straight to deep square leg.
Beau Webster, often competing with Green for a spot in the team, looked composed on his Ashes debut as he and Smith ensured England’s tired bowlers will have to back up for a third consecutive day.
Brief scores:
Australia 518 for 7 in 124 overs ( Travis Head 163, Marnus Labuschagne 48, Steven Smith 129*; Brydon Carse 3-108, Ben Stokes 2-87) lead England 384 in 97.3 overs (Joe Root 160, Harry Brook 84, Jamie Smith 46; Mitchell Starc 2-93, Michael Neser 4-60, Scott Boland 2-85) by 134 runs
[Cricinfo]
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