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The incomparable Vijaya Malalasekera

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Cambridge team pictured besides the Grace Gates at Lord’s. Vijay Malalasekera seated front row extreme right and Mano Ponniah standing second from right.

It was the Royal – Thomian of 1963. Royal batting second were facing a formidable Thomian total of 254 for 8 declared. Before long they were heading for trouble at 34 for 3. That’s when a fresh-faced youngster still only 17, made his way to the middle. Before his arrival, he was subjected to a copious dousing of well-meant advice from Saliya Atapattu – a former Royal sporting personality, seated next to him in the pavilion. It was all about what must be done to avert a possible calamity, since that possibility now seemed staring Royal, squarely in the face.

Distinctly funereal

As if to confirm Saliya Attapattu’s worst fears were no stretch of his imagination, Royal were soon 42 for 4 when Tony Sirimanne (later of CR fame) snared the scalp of the Royal skipper S.S. Kumar for very little. Let alone overhauling the Thomians, getting past the follow-on mark now seemed a distant dream for the Reid Avenue boys. The Thomian attack consisted of burly Roger D’ Silva, Barney Reid, Tony Sirimanne, Panditharatne and Sarath Seneviratne, and as Cedric Fernando now wended his way to join Vijaya Malalasekera in the middle, the mood in the Royal camp was distinctly funereal, while the noise from the Thomian camp threatened to lift the pavilion rafters.

Roger D’Silva with his tail up, was bowling like the wind, and Barney Reid was doing his usual thing – bowling spin and swing with mesmeric skill and guile, out-foxing everyone standing 20 yards away. With Cedric Fernando’s arrival, everyone resigned to expect the worst.

That was when the perfect anti-climax slowly began to unravel.

Took the bull by the horns

Malalasekera -a fresh faced lad, strong of build and even stronger of temperament, wasn’t the type to die wondering. Being a cricketing buccaneer of sorts, he quickly ditched Saliya Attapattu’s well meant advice, no sooner he got up from his pavilion seat. Deciding instead to take the bull by its horns, Malalasekera cut loose with an array of stinging square cuts, drives, pulls and hooks, against Roger D’ Silva’s menacing pace. Then he proceeded to nullify Barney Reid’s nagging accuracy, guile and cunning, by unleashing an array of strokes of such breathtaking fury, they were now being wildly cheered by even those in the Thomian camp, who by then had reached an advanced state of inebriation and didn’t know who was doing what. Noisy pavilion banter argued whether or not this was the most furious innings ever seen at a Royal-Thomian. Let there be no mistake; this was no exhibition of vulgar village green hitting. Instead, it was fearsomely orthodox stroke play, executed with immense power and precision. In short, it was reminiscent of an Everton Weekes’ innings when in full flow. Some of Vijaya’s drives to the cover boundary were of such ferocity and force, the ball would hit the short parapet wall at the front of block C or D at the Oval, and ricochet right back to the actual playing strip! Thanks to this unprecedented assault, Malalasekera reached a sensational hundred in just two hours and 10 minutes on either side of lunch on day two. That innings which contained 20 fours and one six turned the flow of the game on its head, and to date ranks as one of the most fiercest exhibitions of sustained hitting ever seen in the entire history of the Royal-Thomian. Shortly after that blitzkrieg, Royal declared at 207 for four.

Hadrian’s wall

Throughout it all, Cedric Fernando served as the perfect foil for Vijaya, presenting a bat which rivalled Hadrian’s great wall beyond which no ball could pass. No amount of praise would do him justice for the role he played in this gallant partnership. Although playing second fiddle, Fernando played a stellar role in the proceedings and at the declaration was unbeaten on 47. Malalasekera remained unbowed on 112,whilst playing the innings of his life.

Never a selfish cricketer

Vijaya Malalasekera was never a selfish cricketer. Instead, he was a supremely confident young man with a cavalier bent, ready and willing at all time to back his own instincts. Not in a conceited way, he was cocky up to his eye-lashes, of his own abilities. It was not in his character to tailor his innings to make good his promise to his parents, that should they come down from London to witness the match, he would make a hundred. Grapevine rumour has it that the father in a moment of light headed recklessness had responded saying that in that event, he would secure his son a seat at Cambridge. Being Ceylon’s Ambassador in England at the time, there was not a lot Gunapala Malalasekera could not do, given the esteem in which he was held in those parts. But Vijaya being Vijaya and therefore hugely popular and totally out-going in a literal and metaphorical sense, had little time for study whilst at Royal. As things panned out Vijaya secured his place at Cambridge after acquiring the necessary entrance requirements in England. The story heard through the grapevine of his father’s promise to get him to Cambridge in return for a ‘big match’ hundred may be or mayn’t be true, but it is a good story and therefore shall be retained. What is definitely true however, is that his sporting stock rose considerably after his ‘big match’ performance and tilted the scales in his favour, when the prestigious ‘Schoolboy Cricketer of the Year’ award was announced. That was a fitting culmination to a terrific season for this hugely popular, fun loving young man.

On the strength of that one inning Vijaya Malalasekera was included in the Colts XI which played the University in a crucial game which would decide the Sara Trophy champions for that year. Malalasekera played a brief but trademark innings as Colts got the better of their opponents who went on to win the championship on points. That was the only Sara trophy game Vijaya played in Ceylon, before proceeding to England to join his parents. With his departure, he forewent the Royal College captaincy the following year.

Having fulfilled the entrance requirements and charmed his way past the Admissions Tutor at Fitzwilliam College in Cambridge, Malalasekera was in like a breeze and allowed to read for a degree in Law in 1966.

Murray asked to leave

Much like Lorenz Pereira of a slightly earlier vintage and quite predictably, Vijaya enjoyed his life at Cambridge to the fullest. So did one Deryck Murray, who kept wicket for the West Indies and captained the Varsity at cricket in 1965 and 1966. Murray took an instant liking to Vijaya, both for his style of batting and his approach to life. In fact, Murray tended to enjoy himself so much, he was kindly asked to leave the University by the end of his second year whilst being Captain of Cambridge! The social life at Cambridge seemed irresistible to some, and a source of immense distraction to cavalier cricketers, who were unwilling to have their noses constantly pore over their books while the bright lights beckoned. In Malalasekera’s first year (1966) while batting at No 6, he played 24 innings in 13 first class matches, making 323 runs with a highest score of 80 at an average of 13.45. Against Essex in his very first match Vijaya batting in the same vein as his ‘Big Match’ innings of 1963, pummeled a brilliant 80 against the likes of Barry Knight, Robin Hobbs and Ray East, and against Northants, he made an attractive 72 teaming up with Deryck Murray to record the highest Cambridge total for the season. But as Wisden pointed out, “….. V.P. Malalasekera from Ceylon, flattered only to deceive too often.” All told, Cambridge enjoyed a poor season in 1966.

Peter May’s admiration

Having enjoyed a reasonably successful first year, Malalasekera failed to become an automatic choice the following year as his magical form deserted him. Consequently, and much to his chagrin he was left out of the Cambridge side, and was playing for the Fitzwilliam College XI instead; a crushing blow to a young man’s ego. However, in the annual Cambridge University v Quidnuncs (former Cantabrigians) fixture, Steve Russell, the Cambridge captain invited Malalasekera to open batting with All-Ceylon opener Mano Ponniah, who had by then, just joined the Varsity.

Stung by the fact that he was dropped from the Varsity team, Malalasekera on his way to the middle, somewhat nervously asked Ponniah not only to take first strike, but also to ‘take it easy’ against Test opening bowler Richard Hutton, who was tasked to open the proceedings. Ponniah taking first strike promptly forgot his solemn promise and gleefully took a single off the very first ball to get off strike. This brought Vijaya Malalasekera to face England Test paceman Richard Hutton, now in his prime.

As Ponniah recalls, nervousness was plainly visible on Vijaya’s face. In fact, his face seemed whiter than Hutton’s! That was before the ball arrived. It came at a screaming pace and left at a screaming pace. In-between, Malalasekera had leaned into it and stroked it superlatively on the up with such sublime timing and placement, the ball vanished like a startled banshee, gathering speed as it went. This was such a spectacular strike through the covers, Peter May standing at first slip could not resist applauding, and as he crossed to change ends at the end of the over, he stopped and asked Vijaya for his 2 lb 2 oz bat to have a closer look at it. Peter May the ex- English captain was renowned as one of the hardest strikers of a cricket ball in England in his glory days of active cricket.

The first Asians to open for Cambridge

For the record, Mano Ponniah and Vijay Malalasekera were the first Asians to open for Cambridge in the Varsity game of 1967. This was Ponniah’s first year at Cambridge. Vijaya missed playing in the entire 1968 season, thanks to a troublesome shoulder injury.

Completing his degree the following year, Malalasekera proceeded to Law College, where he passed his Law exams in 1970. Reading his name on the notice board one day, he was so thrilled, he ran all the way to his erstwhile friend Gijra Rajapakse’s digs to break the news and proceeded to ring all known Sri Lankan friends to come along to London House to fittingly celebrate his success!

Chose his friends wisely

Unsurprisingly, Vijaya– at least outwardly -was a strong Buddhist. He was also an internationalist in every sense of the word. He saw no division amongst religions; a fact driven home by his marriage to Niri – a strong catholic. Gijra Rajapakse was the Bestman at the wedding. The story goes that Gijra, walking alongside Vijaya just seconds before they entered the church together, whispered in his ear “Malalasekera, the car is outside; in case you change your mind”. There was no gain saying Vijaya chose his closest friends wisely!

Among the hand luggage he carried with him on his way back to Ceylon was a book on Buddhism picked up on the way. Knowing that it was very likely his parents would be at the airport to greet him, Vijaya carried the book prominently in his hand to impress his father in particular, who was a leading light in Buddhist affairs back in Ceylon. The tactic some say, worked wonders!

Nearly decapitated….

On his return, Vijaya played a few Sara Trophy games for the NCC and then shifted to the CCC where he played some Daily News cricket. Mahen Dayananda of the CCC who shared many a partnership with him recalls walking up to Malalasekera and pleading with him on one occasion to hit his straight drives not so straight, lest he be decapitated at the non-striker’s end!

Malalasekera tried his hand at practicing law but soon decided to join the private sector instead. Shortly, he was heading the legal Department at Ceylon Tobacco Company, and ended up as its Corporate and Regulatory Affairs Director. Upon his retirement he was invited to join several other companies as a Board member, since his expertise, experience and knowledge on good governance were in high demand, and valued by many.

The first two Interim Committees

Following gun fire at the Cricket Board AGM in early 1999, President Chandrika Kumaratunge dissolved the Board and installed the first Interim Committee, headed by Rienzie Wijetilleke. That Committee came across as a breath of fresh air into the musty cricket administration at the time. However, they functioned for less than one year from June 1999, resigning from their posts in May 2000, owing to continual political intrigue exercised by those who should have known better. Not before long, the Cricket Board was again mired in controversy, necessitating higher powers to intervene. Possibly because she knew him personally and trusted in his ability and sincerity, Vijaya Malalasekera was appointed by President Chandrika Kumaratunge as Chairman of the second Interim Committee of the cricket Board in 2002. He accepted, but not before making it quite clear that he wished her to always fully back his judgment, failing which he would be gone. To her eternal credit, President Kumaratunge kept to her word and respected the understanding. Appointed alongside him were Michael Tissera, Sidath Wettimuny and Kushil Gunasekera, in what was one of the most productive and efficient Interim Committees the Board had ever known.

During Vijaya’s tenure, Sri Lanka registered a record ten straight Test wins under Sanath Jayasuriya’s captaincy. At least a part of that success must be credited to Vijaya’s leadership and methods of governance. He led by example. He was clear cut, forthright, bold and fearless in his decision making. Yet he was non interfering. He set an example and displayed sterling qualities of leadership. This trend cascaded to each rung below. He strongly believed a leader is only as good as his team. Men of proven worth and capability were invited to serve on the various sub-committees, and they were allowed to utilize their expertise and work without hindrance. Alas, that Interim Committee too wasn’t destined to remain long in office. In the political upheaval of late 2002, the Ministry of Sports went into the hands of a different ruling political faction and Vijaya Malalasekera for no valid reason was removed from his post as a consequence. That was the end of one of the most productive spells of cricket administration in this country.

Walked with Kings ……

Fun loving and friendly by nature, Vijaya Malalasekera was comfortable in any crowd, be it royalty or men from the street. He could – as the poet said – walk with Kings, yet not lose the common touch. Although a colourful cricketer and a ‘character’ in his own right, he proved in a spell of less than one year, that his greatest contribution to the game could have been through its administration. It was to the eternal misfortune of this country that it failed to use him considerably more, than it actually did!



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Kane Williamson retires from international cricket

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Kane Williamson is one of only three players to score more than 15,000 international runs for New Zealand [BBC]

Former New Zealand captain Kane Williamson has retired from all international cricket with immediate effect.

The 35-year-old featured in the first Test against England at Lord’s, registering a duck and 18, but will play no further part in the three-match series, which will resume at The Oval on 17 June.

Williamson retires as New Zealand’s leading all-format run-scorer, with 19,346 runs, including 48 centuries and six double-hundreds, in 378 appearances between 2010 and 2026.

As the Black Caps’ most prolific Test batter, he scored 9,515 runs at an average of 54.06, including 33 centuries, in 110 matches.

Williamson captained New Zealand on 206 occasions between 2012 and 2024, leading the side through their golden period when they won the inaugural World Test Championship in 2021 and reached the finals of the 2019 World Cup and 2021 T20 World Cup.

Explaining his decision, Williamson, who retired from T20Is in November, said: “I’ve thought about it for a while, but over the last few days it’s become clear now is the right time.

“I’ve always felt a strong drive and hunger for international cricket, and I take pride in knowing I’ve given it my all in every match I’ve played for New Zealand.

“Continuing with anything less wouldn’t be right and I feel fortunate to step away on my own terms.

“I leave feeling optimistic about where this group is heading. There’s a huge amount of talent, and a real desire to do something special with this New Zealand team.

“It’s a team I love, and I feel incredibly fortunate to have been part of it for so long. It will continue to be dear to my heart.”

Head coach Rob Walter paid tribute to Williamson’s “legacy” and impact on the Black Caps, stating he will “remain embedded in its DNA”.

“Anyone who’s had the privilege of working with Kane understands he is a very special player and person,” Walter said.

“His numbers and batting skills speak for themselves, but it’s what he means to this Black Caps team, as well as world cricket – that will be his legacy.

“His impact on the culture and standards of this team will remain embedded in its DNA.

“Kane’s always put the team first and although we’re disappointed to see him go, we’re happy to know he’s content and at peace with his decision.

“An incredible player, awesome team-mate, a wonderful leader and a fantastic ambassador for our sport.”

Former New Zealand all-rounder Sir Richard Hadlee described Williamson as a “wonderful player” and an “unflappable leader”, who was the “architect of some our of greatest moments in cricket”.

[BBC]

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Holder, Joseph set up victory as West Indies go 1-0 up against Sri Lanka

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Jason Holder picked up two wickets in two balls [Cricinfo]

West Indies survived a spirited Sri Lankan defence in chase of a middling target of 148, as they eventually secured a final-over, but ultimately comfortable, seven-wicket victory in the first T20I at Sabina Park. The rain which had been forecast pleasantly stayed away, as a raucous home crowd finally got something to celebrate following the ODI washouts.

A flicked Rovman Powell six over deep midwicket off the expensive Dilshan Madushanka sealed the win, but it was one built on the patience of Shai Hope. The West Indian skipper made it a point to carry his bat through the innings in a 54-ball 65, as ensured there would be no hiccoughs come the crunch.

Hope was part of a rampant 39-ball opening stand of 67 with Brandon King, before shifting gears through the middle to string crucial partnerships of 28, 33 and 21*, with Shimron Hetmeyer, Roston Chase and Powell.

Sri Lanka’s bowlers toiled to drag the game deep in the second half of the chase, buffering a 66-run powerplay to take the game into the final over. Wanindu Hasaranga was the pick of the bowlers with figures of 2 for 32, while Eshan Malinga also impressed with 1 for 26. ‘

But on a wicket that wasn’t necessarily the most conducive to shot-making it was Sri Lanka’s batting that let them down. Kamindu Mendis waged a lone war for much of the innings during a 39-ball 51, and prior that Kusal Mendis had blitzed 36 off 23. But contributions aside from theirs was not nearly enough.

Jason Holder’s 3 for 18 was the catalyst for all the good West Indies managed with the ball, and it earned him a deserved Player of the Match award.

Generally when chasing a middling target on a sticky surface, a fast start in the powerplay when the ball is hard and fielders are in the ring is almost a prerequisite. And on that front the West Indian openers delivered.

The pair of Shai Hope and Brandon King struck 66 in an opening six-over salvo, as Sri Lanka were left ruing a host a missed opportunities – and King was at the centre of each of them.

The first was off Dushmantha Chameera, who rushed the right-hander with a short one that he could only miscue to midwicket. A third umpire no-ball check though offered a reprieve, much to the delight of the home crowd. The following free hit was a yorker squeezed to mid-on for a single that was never on, Sri Lanka again letting a chance slip by with a missed direct hit.

Then off the first ball of the very next over, Madushanka looked to have trapped King leg before, only for the decision to be overturned upon review for having pitched outside leg.

King made the most of his good fortune as he soon after found his timing, racing along to a 22-ball 37 before eventually been knocked over by a Hasaranga googly. Hope at the other end carried on at a similar click, managing 29 off 17 during the stand; he would crucially bat through to the latter stages to see the hosts home.

If West Indies’ start was belligerent, what followed certainly belied that. The 10 overs leading up to the death brought 54 runs and two wickets, as Sri Lanka clawed themselves back into proceedings. Such was West Indies’ early impact, it meant Sri Lanka were always underdogs but it crucially kept them in the game till the latter stages – when anything could happen.

Key to this was the Sri Lankan spin pairing of Maheesh Theekshana and Hasaranga. The latter was more expensive, giving away 32 in his four overs but picking up the wickets of King and Hetmyer. Theekshana meanwhile went wicketless but his four overs went for just 20 runs.

Ably assisting them was Malinga, carrying over his IPL form, mixing up his lengths and pace with a four over spell of 1 for 26. Chameera also responded well from the early tap he was on the receiving end of, landing some crucial yorkers in the death overs.

To put it into context, between the 10th and final over West Indies struck one six and two fours. It meant they need six off the final over. And Powell needed just two deliveries to ensure that very outcome.

Earlier, Kusal Mendis continued his rich vein of form with a with a 23-ball 36 to ensure a near 10-per-over powerplay for Sri Lanka. Twenty-six of those runs came in boundaries, including three sixes – two consecutively off Matthew Forde in a 17-run fourth over. That though would be Sri Lanka’s most profitable of the evening as a flurry of wickets to end the powerplay period reeled in the visitors just as they were looking to build a head of steam.

From 43 for no loss, Sri Lanka found themselves 56 for 3 at the end of the powerplay, and then 65 for 4 midway through the eighth over. A situation made considerably more perilous owing to the fact that their 6-5 combination meant a shorter batting lineup.

Following the sudden loss of their top order, including their in-form skipper, Kamindu and former skipper Dasun Shanaka had their work cut out for them. With only Hasaranga to come in the form of any sort of batting, wickets were at a premium and risks a minimum.

This was reflected in just the eight boundaries scored between the pair – including three sixes – in the eight overs they batted together. That they managed a run rate of 7.37 in this period was a credit to the pair’s running between the wickets. Even so Chase in particular proved hard to get away with his quick off breaks, as he snuck in 13 dots to the pair – pressure which eventually told in Shanaka slicing chase to backward point as he attempted to up the tempo.

That wicket was timely for the Windies, coming just as Sri Lanka would have been eyeing a death overs assault. It meant Hasaranga had little time to get his eye in, and he too would fall two overs later for an inconsequential 3 off 6.

Here the pressure on Kamindu mounted, and the West Indies also did well to starve the set batter of the strike for concerted periods, with him eventually dismissed in the final over looking to retain the strike on an ill-advised double.

Fresh off a run to the IPL final, Jason Holder once more proved his worth – particularly in the shortest format – as he read the conditions quickly and assertively to rein in Sri Lanka after a fast start. Introduced in the fifth over, he induced a miscue over short third first up from Pathum Nissanka, before following up with a well directed full inducker to knock over the dangerous Lankan opener.

Holder then set himself up for a hat-trick with a successful LBW review the very next delivery, to dismiss Lasith Croospulle who was playing just his second T20I. While the hat-trick was not forthcoming, Holder’s intervention had successfully shifted the momentum.

He would then return at the death to pick up his third as part of an outstanding two-run penultimate over, to end with figures 3 for 18. It meant that despite Kamindu and Shanaka’s best efforts at a mid-innings recovery, Sri Lanka were unable to land the finishing blows, managing just 25 for 4 in the death overs as the innings petered to a limp close.

Scores:
West Indies 149 for 3 in 19.2 overs (Brandon King 37, Shai Hope 65*, Shimron Hetmyer 17, Roston Chase 16, Rovman Powell 10*; Eshan Malinga 1-26, Wanidu Hasaranga 2-32) beat Sri Lanka 147 for 9 in 20 overs (Pathum Nissanka 18, Kusal Mendis 36, Kamindu Mendis 51, Dasun Shanaka 22; Jason Holder 3-18, Shamar Joseph 3-29, Roston Chase 1-18) by seven wickets

[Cricinfo]

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South Korea beat Czech Republic 2-1 in World Cup opener

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[pic BBC]

South Korea came from behind to defeat Czech Republic 2-1 as substitute Oh Hyeon-gyu scored the winning goal in the 80th minute of their World Cup opener.

Son Heung-min and company had dominated the game against the Czechs, who did not have a shot on target until their captain Ladislav Krejci rose to head home a long throw from Vladimir Coufal for the opening goal in the 59th minute.

Former Tottenham forward Son, captaining his nation, had attempted five of South Korea’s eight efforts in the first half, but his biggest chance was blocked by keeper Matej Kovar.

But Feyenoord defensive midfielder Hwang In-beom inspired South Korea’s fightback when he equalised only eight minutes after the Czech opener.

Found inside the box by the lively Lee Kang-in, Hwang deceived Kovar, who had rushed off his line, with a fake shot before scooping the ball over the Czech goalkeeper and into an unguarded goal to make it 1-1.

South Korea thought they had been undone by another Czech set-piece in the 78th minute as Tomas Soucek nodded home a free-kick from the left, but Hong Myung-bo’s side were handed a reprieve as the goal was ruled out for offside.

And their supporters at Estadio Guadalajara were soon celebrating as their side took the lead, with Besiktas forward Oh tapping home a cross from Hwang to complete the turnaround.

But the famous win was only sealed courtesy of keeper Kim Seung-gyu who produced a brilliant low stop to deny Adam Hlozek’s close-range effort in the 82nd minute and also from Michal Sadilek in the stoppage time.

It is the first time in four editions of the World Cup that South Korea have made a winning start to their campaign.

This is South Korea’s eighth all-time win at the FIFA World Cup and the fourth by a 2-1 scoreline. They conceded the opening goal in all four of those matches.

South Korea have lost only one of their last seven opening matches at the FIFA World Cup dating back to 2002 (W4 D2), a 1-0 defeat to Sweden to in 2018.

Son Heung-Min is the second player to appear in four different FIFA World Cups for South Korea (2014-2026), joining current manager Hong Myung-Bo (1990-2002).

Czech Republic will next face South Africa on Thursday, 18 June (17:00 BST) while South Korea take on World Cup co-hosts Mexico,  on Friday, 19 June (02:00).

[BBC]

 

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