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NH bids adieu to Ladies’ College after 50-year stint as TT coach

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N.H Perera pictured with the Ladies’ College table tennis team players

By a Special Sports Correspondent

Former table tennis National Champion, National Coach and sporting legend N.H Perera probably set a record in the Sri Lankan school sporting arena when he retired from coaching Ladies’ College Colombo in the ping pong ball and racket game after serving this academic institute for 50 years.

NH, as he is fondly known in the table tennis circles, started coaching Ladies College back in 1972 following an invitation made to him by the teacher in charge of sports back then Delita Fernando. When he turns the pages of time the only reason that came to his mind to say yes to this coaching assignment was that he wanted to give something back to the sport. He was quite young then (21 to be exact) and had won the table tennis national singles crown twice (1968/70) by then. He recalled with fondness how the lasses from this school won the National School Games title in 2019.

He produced many outstanding female players from this school and the secret behind his success was him being a strict disciplinarian. At the time he said yes to coaching at Ladies’ College he had laid down a condition for the authorities of the school. That was to arrange practices in the morning. This was because he was gainfully employed in work done outside table tennis. This goes on to show the caliber of players in the golden years of the sport. A good many of them had the capacity to contribute to society using their brains and education unlike today where the players are forced to supplement their income through table tennis coaching. For the record, NH served several companies and institutes in many capacities; proving that engaging in competitive sport and showing commitment to employment are a possibility when the individual has the capacity to manage both. When he finally retired from work he held the post of Marketing Manager at United Arab Shipping Lines.

He had his education at Nalanda College and had the honour of being the first table tennis national captain to be produced by this academic institute.

He rates the 1970s as the golden era of the sport. “I say this because we were invited by the ITTF to contest the Afro Asian Latin American Table Tennis Championship in Peking, China. During his playing days, NH had beaten top players from Russia, China, and also Europe. The picture he sees now in Sri Lankan table tennis is not so rosy. “We even lost to Nepal at the last SA Games. I believe the TTASL must be dissolved and a Board of Control for Table Tennis must be formed instead. Today we see many coaches out there who cannot put the ball over the net,” said Perera.

NH sees more potential in the Sri Lanka female players. According to him, the women’s players from Sri Lanka had finished sixth at the previous Commonwealth Games. “I trust that the way forward would be to bring down a female table tennis coach and male trainer; both from China. This would raise the standard of our playing,” said Perera who many years ago qualified as a coach from the Peking University of China.

He also spoke about the psychological aspects to training players. NH underscored the importance of bringing in psychology to training to help players handle unexpected challenges in the game. “You have to do sessions to develop the minds of the players,” said Perera.

He is at present engaged in coaching the students at S. Thomas’ College Mount Lavinia. The school by the sea won the All Island Table Tennis Championships in 2019 under his guidance.

NH maintains high standards for his players and himself. He recalls an incident in the past; which occurred during the time he was young and already the national champion. “I was coming out of the YMCA training hall after training and a photographer asked me to pose for a picture. I was in slacks and this picture appeared in the newspaper. I was summoned to the TTASL and a top official asked me why I had disgraced the sport by not being properly attired for a photograph that appeared in a national newspaper. I learned a valuable lesson in life,” concluded Perera.



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Zalmi favourites in final but Kingsmen arrive with odds-defying juju

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Peshawar Zalmi trumped Hyderabad Kingsmen in a close thriller earlier in the season [Cricinfo]

The Pakistan Super League will have a popular winner this season. It is either Peshawar Zalmi and their adored leader Babar Azam triumphing at what is his home ground, or Hyderabad Kingsmen, a flawed side that has caught fire at the right moments to defy odds to stay alive until the very end.

In Zalmi, there is a team that, with its relentless consistency all tournament, cricketing logic dictates should be the favourites. But in Kingsmen, there is a team Pakistanis can relate to so deeply, one that starts poorly, fixates on impossible scenarios, takes advantage of net run rates, and pulls victories out of dead-and-buried scenarios with what feels like unstoppable momentum on its side. This is the team for whom Pakistani logic will promise that the favourites tag is just another mere obstacle to bulldoze past.

Zalmi have the ingredients a league-winning side needs to possess. The top two run-scorers in the league, as well as the top wicket-taker, all wear yellow. Babar and Kusal Mendis’ phenomenal consistency frees up Mohammad Haris at the top for a free hit in the powerplay, and sets up enough of a platform to take the pressure off the rest.

Sufiyan Muqim, well clear of everybody else on the wickets chart, can derail any batting line-up in his current form, while Iftikhar Ahmed has proved a surprise success with the ball this year. In Ali Raza, Zalmi have perhaps the most valuable emerging player, and certainly the quickest. Oh, and Bangladesh fast bowler Nahid Rana is back for the final after being given dispensation by the BCB.

But Kingsmen, how do you analyse this side? They have Hunain Shah, the scripter of so many of their great moments. That inswinging yorker against Rawalpindiz that secured qualification, those five more in the final over against Islamabad United to seal one of the great PSL wins. They have Usman Khan, no torque and all muscle, like a Bentley stripped for parts and repurposed as a crude battering ram, a cricketing specimen that just isn’t meant to be successful, and has somehow found its ecological niche over the past fortnight.

They have Marnus Labuschagne,  a captain who had never put on a T20 armband before, yet lost himself in the magic of Friday night, charging across the field before emotion overcame him. Someone who has, over the past month, come to understand what cricket in Pakistan is all about, and thrown himself into it with the zeal of a convert.

Momentum and destiny, all appears to lie with the Kingsmen. They have now won seven of their last eight, and found multiple matchwinners in that time. They may not have the completeness of Zalmi, but they will perhaps sense that adversity hasn’t touched their opposition in the way it has tested them. If they can turn this into a game of nerves, Kingsmen have the experience to come through in a way Zalmi might not.

Most importantly, though, a PSL season largely lost to empty stadiums offered a reminder on Friday of how much match-going crowds add to the value of a contest. Most of this season may not have been a classic, but with spectators now watching on, the league is quickly making up for lost time.

Babar Azam is the leading run-scorer of the tournament, one run away from becoming the leading run-scorer in any PSL season. Having endured the roughest patch of his career, something appears to have finally clicked for his T20 game. Across this season, he has become a complete T20 batter rather than the staid accumulator he was for much of his career. Mendis’ form may have helped, but Babar’s form has only grown. In front of an adoring crowd that will, in large part, have come to see him, the Zalmi captain has the chance to secure a legacy-building win that may yet give his international career a second wind.

He may not be in the touch Kingsmen wish, but few would barrack against Glenn Maxwell in the biggest games. So far, Maxwell has played little more than a bit-part role, primarily with the ball, where he has offered genuine value. However, when Kingsmen battled to stay alive in their final group game, he offered a well-timed reminder of how high his ceiling remains in a 37-ball onslaught that fetched 70, and gave his side the cushion to get the huge net run rate win they needed. Pakistani cricket loves a wildcard, and in Maxwell, Kingsmen have the ultimate ace they can play on Sunday.

Rana has arrived in Pakistan and will take his place in the starting XI. That could squeeze Khurram Shahzad out. No other changes are expected.

Peshawar Zalmi (probable) Mohammad Haris (wk), Babar Azam (capt), Kusal Mendis, Michael Bracewell, Abdul Samad, Aaron Hardie, Iftikhar Ahmed, Farhan Yousaf, Nahid Rana,  Sufyan Moqim, Mohammad Basit

Kingsmen will go in with an unchanged side.

Hyderabad Kingsmen (probable): Maaz Sadaqat,  Marnus Labuschagne (capt),  Saim Ayub, Usman Khan (wk),  Glenn Maxwell,  Kusal Perera, Irfan Khan, Hassan Khan, Hunain Shah, Mohammad Ali, Akif Javed

[Cricinfo]

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Thomian Wijemanne’s stocks keep rising in tennis

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Andrew Kaavinda Wijemanne

In tennis circles, Andrew Kaavinda Wijemanne is becoming a bit of an household name exceeding expectations doing his schools S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia proud.

This week, young Wijemanne won the Kurunegala Club Weekend Ranking Tournament under-18 singles and then partnered with Nevan Kannangara of St. Joseph’s to win the men’s doubles event. He also reached the finals of the Wayamba Championship in the under-18 category before going down to his doubles partner Nevan Kannangara.

The duo also have reached the doubles final in the Negombo Open scheduled for Sunday.

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On Eran’s watch, cricket seeks redemption

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Eran Wickramaratne assumed office as new cricket chief this week

Sri Lanka’s new Interim Committee, helmed by Eran Wickramaratne, has walked out to bat amid a swell of cautious optimism, with cricket lovers hoping the ship can finally be steadied after years of choppy waters. Yet even before the ink has dried, the rumour mill has gone into overdrive, peddling the tired line that failure to hold elections within three months will invite an ICC suspension. That, to put it mildly, is a cock and bull story.

Interim Committees are not alien to Sri Lankan cricket, nor are they frowned upon by the International Cricket Council. In fact, many of the earlier ones, led by men of standing, came in, rolled up their sleeves and put the house in order.

The rot, as many would argue, set in during the era of Mahinda Rajapaksa, when such Interim Committees were used less as repair kits and more as patronage platforms. Mahinda used the cricket board to give positions to his friends. He was always loyal to his friends. In turn, his friends showed their loyalty back to Mahinda by awarding the lucrative television deal of SLC to his second son’s company.

This current Interim Committee, however, reads like a team sheet you wouldn’t mind backing. When you have a former Marylebone Cricket Club President in Kumar Sangakkara, a seasoned ICC match referee in Roshan Mahanama and a respected elder statesman in Sidath Wettimuny, you’re hardly short on cricketing brains trust. Add to that the corporate acumen of Prakash Schaffter and the legal nous of Dinal Phillips, and it’s an all-round side with depth in every department. As Tony Greig once said during a game in Sharjah, ‘Don’t tell anything nasty about Sri Lankan cricket to Dinal Phillips.’

They hardly need advice from the cheap seats, but anyway, here’s our two cents.

First, selection; the engine room of any successful side. Get that wrong and you’re forever chasing the game. Whether it’s Sangakkara, Wettimuny or Mahanama taking the reins, or someone cut from similar cloth, the message is simple: pick a selector who knows his onions. A bull in a China shop is less troublesome than the man heading selections at the moment.

Then there’s the elephant in the pavilion – Test cricket. Between July 2025 and June 2026, Sri Lanka hasn’t got a single Test match. Not one. For a nation that once fought tooth and nail for Test status under the stewardship of Gamini Dissanayake, this is sacrilege. The great man must be turning in his grave.

While the Executive Committee has packed its bags, the top executives still loiter at Maitland Place like a night watchman that refuses to vacate after a collapse. Expect the usual stock responses – Test cricket isn’t profitable, or the calendar is dictated by the World Test Championship. But such thinking is as outdated as playing timeless Tests. Institutions don’t move forward by blocking on the back foot forever. Fresh ideas are needed and perhaps a few long-standing occupants need to walk before they’re shown the pavilion.

Schedule more Test matches, even against sides that are not part of the World Test Championship. Don’t believe in the lies your top executives dish out. Tell them, if there’s a will, there’s a way.

Women’s cricket is another area crying out for attention. While other nations have moved the field up and attacked, Sri Lanka has been content to play defensively. At present, cricket hasn’t been able to appeal to the girls in schools. The chosen sports by girls at school level are netball, basketball, swimming, badminton and athletics. Cricket, sadly doesn’t come among the top ten sports of girls schools be it at Holy Family Convent in Colombo or Marjan Muslim Ladies College in Sammanthurai.

The remedy isn’t rocket science. Invest in schools, provide equipment, open doors. Set a target; say 500 schools playing the game within three years and chase it with intent. Provincial academies could serve as nurseries, turning raw talent into finished products. Cricket, after all, is an expensive sport; without support, many promising players are run out before they reach the crease.

Other sports have shown the way. Basketball, for instance, cast its net wide post-war, tapping into regions like Jaffna and reaping the rewards. Cricket, meanwhile, has been guilty of too much talk about infrastructure and not enough about grassroots. Forget the grandstands for a moment, it’s the nets that matter. Take the game to the people, coach the coaches and give emerging regions a crack at competitive cricket.

The Lanka Premier League, too, has promised much but delivered in fits and starts. Like a flashy opener who flatters to deceive, it has struggled for consistency. Questionable ownerships and off-field controversies haven’t helped. Perhaps it’s time for Sri Lanka Cricket to play the long game – trim profits, bring in credible local investors and build a tournament that can stand the test of time rather than chasing quick bucks.

Then there’s a small but telling symbol of excess – the Minister’s Box at major cricket venues. For years, it has served as a cosy enclosure for the high and mighty. Why not flip the script? Open it up for the disabled, give them a chance to watch the game in comfort. Cricket, after all, belongs to the people, not just those in high office. (Credit to the current Minister of Sports for not using the facility).

The ball now is on Eran’s court.

by Rex Clementine

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