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Selectors need to go

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Do the selectors have an axe to grind with Angelo Mathews? Or are they being used as cats’ paws?

Rex Clementine in Trivandrum

One-day cricket has been played for more than 50 years now and there have been over 4500 matches in this format and Sunday in the southern Indian city of Trivandrum we witnessed history as India bowled out Sri Lanka for a paltry 73 runs. The 317-run defeat is the heaviest in the history of the game by any team. This is no more an embarrassment. This is beyond repair.

The national selection panel’s flawed strategies have led us into this mess. Sri Lanka are unlikely to qualify automatically for this year’s World Cup and they could even miss out on playing the World Cup later this year if they have a horrible run in the qualifiers.

If that were to happen it would be a crying shame for a team that had reached three 50 over World Cup finals in the last 25 years winning it once.

The selectors should have stepped down when their decision to retain the injured Danushka Gunathilaka backfired in Australia and the player ended up in jail bringing shame to the entire nation. But they carried on regardless and Sunday’s result is further proof that their policies have doomed the sport that we all love.

In the last two years, there has been a lack of transparency and maybe this is an effort to target certain players.

When Dimuth Karunaratne was called back to play ODI cricket in 2019 having not played that format for more than four years, there was sound reasoning. It was explained that batting had too many collapses and the team needed someone to hold one end up. Then when the current panel came in they blamed Karunaratne saying that he was slowing down the innings conveniently forgetting why he had been brought in in the first place – to play the anchor role.

The selectors’ could be acting as cat’s paws of some individuals and they may not necessarily be board officials. Someone who doesn’t have the guts to call the shots directly may be using the national selection panel to settle scores.

Don’t forget that Karunaratne and other senior players were in the midst of a contracts row for bringing down salaries. All of a sudden you find them exiled from white ball cricket and we are told that there are concerns about fitness and that 50 and 20 over formats are a young man’s game.

Yes, 20 overs you can accept that argument but 50 overs is a different kettle of fish and you need some experience in your side.

Then, having flaunted so much on fitness being paramount and non-negotiable we find that fitness is no more a yardstick for selection. Unfit players are tolerated and the much-hyped fitness regime had been thrown out of the window. It’s a cock and bull story and secretly scores have been settled.

The fact of the matter is players like Dimuth and Angelo have not failed any fitness tests but the younger ones who have failed have found slots in the national cricket team. That’s simply not cricket!

Selectors behave like petty thieves retaliating to certain actions of players. You need a wise head of a Sidath Wettimuny who took on bigger boys aftermath of the 1999 World Cup campaign but didn’t burn bridges and took them to Pakistan because the Wasims and Waqars aren’t for the faint-hearted. In the end, a veteran helped Sri Lanka over the line with a broken finger and blood on the pitch.

Even Michael Tissera, Ashantha de Mel and Aravinda de Silva who have headed selection panels in recent years have diplomatically solved many a delicate issue. During their tenures, there was good communication and transparency. Players were challenged but never ever harshly treated. The current selection panel has not addressed a single media briefing to explain their policies. They are simply groping in the dark and the sport suffers.

We follow England’s blueprint for the 50-over format that they used in 1990s. The results have been horrible. England depended on too many all-rounders, in Sanjay Manjrekar’s words ‘bits and pieces cricketers’. There’s no way that in a playing eleven you can have four all-rounders. Despite this strategy backfiring time and time again they stick to it and it’s time that fresh thinking is brought in to take the game forward.



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Hope holds firm as West Indies drag New Zealand into fifth-day battle

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Shai Hope scored his fourth Test hundred (Cricinfo)

A depleted New Zealand attack – effectively reduced to just two-and-a-half frontline bowlers – was made to toil as a defiant West Indies rearguard stretched the contest into a fifth day on an increasingly docile Hagley Oval surface.

Forced off the field on day three by an eye infection, Shai Hope returned with sunglasses under his helmet to compile an unbeaten 116. It followed his first-innings 56 and marked his second century in three innings, a seamless extension of the defiance he showed while stonewalling India for long periods in New Delhi in October.

If Hope was the fulcrum, Justin Greaves  was the anchor beside him. He reined in his instincts to play a composed, almost uncharacteristically restrained hand to finish 55 not out off 143 balls. His unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Hope was worth 140 as New Zealand’s attack toiled under the blazing Christchurch sun.

Nathan Smith did not come out to bat and spent the entire innings off the field with a side strain. When Matt Henry left the field after the 35th over – later heading to hospital next door for scans – with West Indies 92 for 4, New Zealand may have hoped to finish off the game quickly.

But with his bowling resources rapidly thinning, Tom Latham – already standing in with the gloves due to Tom Blundell’s torn hamstring that ruled him out of not just this Test but the next – was left to lean heavily on Rachin Ravindra and Michael Bracewell’s part-time spin around pacer Jacob Duffy. On a surface that only got easier to bat on against the old ball, Hope and Greaves settled in and applied themselves admirably.

Having begun with positive intent, Hope was tested periodically with the short ball, Duffy setting a square leg halfway to the rope along with a short leg and fine leg for the pull. Hope mostly swayed and ducked out of harm’s way, and on the rare occasions he was tempted into the shot, he did well to keep it down. He brought up his fourth Test century off 139 deliveries.

Duffy employed a similar plan to Greaves, whose natural game is far more instinctive. But to his credit, Greaves appeared to take a cue from Hope, choosing restraint instead. He played only when the ball was at his body, using his height to ride the bounce and fend safely. While he was a lot more enterprising against spin, the fundamental of his knock was crease occupation.

Hope and Greaves laid down the template for those who perished prior to their arrival. Tagenarine Chanderpaul and John Campbell were put through a stern new ball test by Foulkes and Henry as they repeatedly tested both their edges in an engaging first spell. Chanderpaul’s propensity to shuffle across got him into trouble more often than not, and was out to a short ball that he inside-edged to the keeper for 6 off 45 balls.

Campbell – out an over earlier – was taken out by Foulkes as he jabbed at an away-swinger with no feet movement as Bracewell took a superb low catch at second slip. In the overs prior to his dismissal, Campbell wore a blow on his boot as he smashed one back off an inside-edge, making him groan in discomfort. This may have eventually had a hand in his dismissal.

Alick Athanaze never got going, and the frustration of being unable to score had him attempt a pull, only to be rushed into the stroke by Bracewell. He only managed to toe-end a pull to mid-on. And when Roston Chase fell in eerily similar fashion to his dismissal in the first innings – nibbling at a Henry away-swinger while being rooted to the crease – West Indies were collapsing swiftly and were 72 for 4.

A four-day defeat loomed until Greaves and Hope dug in to give West Indies some hope even as New Zealand’s tired attack wheeled away in the hope of a mistake. That wasn’t to come, as West Indies took the fight into the final day even though hopes of scaling down the 531-run target they were set seem just a pipe dream for now.

Earlier in the morning, New Zealand surprised many by choosing to bat on. Perhaps this was to give their bowlers more rest on a placid surface, considering the slew of injuries. Kemar Roach  picked up three of the four wickets to fall, finishing with figures of 5 for 78 to take his wickets tally to 290.

Brief scores:

West Indies 167 and 212 for 4 (Shai Hope 116*, Justin Greaves 55*;  Jacob Duffy 2-60) trail New Zealand 231 and 466 for 8 dec (Rachin Ravindra 176, Tom  Latham 145; Kemar Roach 5-78) by 319 runs

(Cricinfo)

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Colombo Aces unveils Golf Team in major franchise expansion

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Colombo Aces officially introduced its Golf Team for the inaugural Ceylon Golf League 2025, Sri Lanka’s first franchise-based golf tournament — at a special unveiling event held recently in Colombo.

Co-founded by entrepreneurs Shamal Perera and Suhayb Sangani, along with Sri Lankan cricket legend Mahela Jayawardene, the inaugural Ceylon Golf League 2025 commenced on the 5th December at the Royal Colombo Golf Club, featuring eight franchise teams.

Across three days and three formats, eight city-based franchises will compete in a high-intensity showcase that sets a new benchmark for the sport locally.

Responding to the impact of recent floods, Ceylon Golf League 2025 is pledging over LKR 10 million from this weekend’s proceeds to support the Government of Sri Lanka in restoring affected infrastructure nationwide. In addition to the prize money already allocated to the main fund, Colombo Aces will contribute a further LKR 250,000 to the cause.

The Colombo Aces Golf Team will be led by Jehan De Saram, a highly respected PGA-qualified Sri Lankan golf professional who serves as both Captain and Head Coach. De Saram brings extensive experience to the role, having previously been the Director of Golf at the Royal Colombo Golf Club and a former national coach for the Sri Lanka golf team. Renowned for developing young talent, he has also competed in numerous local and international tournaments, adding significant depth and expertise to the Aces’ coaching setup.

Colombo Aces Golf Team – Kushal Johnpillai, Uchitha Ranasinghe (Men’s 2 & under), G.G Sathsara, Chanaka Perera (Men’s 3 to 6), Rajeev Rajapaksa, Chulaka Amarasinghe (Men’s 7 to 10), Reza Magdon Ismail, Thusith Wijesinghe, Kapila Dandeniya (Men’s 11 to 14), Fazlur Muzammil, Dhevan Peiris (Men’s 15 to 18), Usha De Silva, Sanduni Wanasinghe (Ladies’ 20 & under), Sandra Cadien, Vihara Herath and Fran De Mel (Ladies’ 21 & over) .

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Root 135 not out, Starc six-for highlight absorbing opening day

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Joe Root celebrates his century [Cricinfo]

After an interminable break between matches following 48 hours of mayhem in Perth, the Ashes resumed with England producing a rollercoaster batting performance as Joe Root ended his century jinx on Australian soil in the day-night second Test.

In the final hour of an absorbing opening day, Root raised his arms aloft under the lights before taking off his helmet to celebrate his 40th Test century and first in Australia.

Root finished unbeaten on 135 from 202 balls and anchored an England first innings that at times showed restraint, but was also marked by reckless dismissals. Four batters fell for ducks with England again tormented by pink ball maestro Mitchell Starc, who finished with 6 for 71 to power past Wasim Akram’s record for most Test wickets by a left-arm quick.

But after the humiliation of batting just 67.3 across two innings in Perth, England batted the whole day – albeit only 74 overs were bowled – as they posted their first score over 300 in a Test in Australia since January 2018.

Brief scores:
England 325 for 9 in 74 overs (Joe Root 132*, Crawley 76, Harry Brook 31, Jofra Archer 32*; Mitchell Starc 6-71) vs Australia

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