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Kusal’s century likely to keep top spot for Trinity  

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Under 19 Cricket  

by Reemus Fernando

Trinity opener Kusal Wijetunga scored the 18th century of the series for his school as the visitors posted 300 runs against Royal in the 130th Royal-Trinity Under 19 cricket encounter at Reid Avenue on Wednesday.

According to Royal College statistician M.L. Fernando, this series which commenced way back in 1893 had witnessed batsmen scoring 17 centuries for Trinity against Royal’s 31. Yesterday, Wijetunga anchored the top order with the latest century of the series for his school to post a competitive total. Trinity will now look to keep the top spot of the group in the ongoing Under 19 tournament against second placed Royal, who are playing their last match of the league.

This fixture is both a traditional encounter and a tournament match. If Trinity win first innings points in this match they will be able to keep the top spot. If Royal win on first innings then they can overtake Trinity. However, Trinity have one more match remaining in the league to fight for the top spot.

With regard to the traditional series, Royal lead the victory tally 44-25. While 59 matches have ended in draws, there had also been a tie in the series.

Royal registered their last victory of the series in 2015 when Harith Samarasinghe was their captain, Trinity last won in the 2016 season when R.K. Sayer and N.K. Weerasinghe were their captains.

This is the second longest cricket series for Trinity, while their series against Wesley (131 editions) is their oldest.

Meanwhile, in the other matches started on Wednesday, Thurstan were 142 for two wickets at stumps in reply to Mahinda’s 161 runs at Galle. St. Thomas’ Matara amassed 378 runs for seven wickets at stumps against St. Sylvester’s at Boyagane thanks to an unbeaten knock of 136 runs by Jimuth Iddamalgoda.

Scores of Matches  

Kusal’s century propels Trinity at Reid Avenue

Scores: 

Trinity

300 all out in 78 overs (Kusal Wijetunga 103, Rahal Amarasinghe 48, Lakwin Abeysinghe 21, Jayavi Liyanagama 61; Dan Poddiwela 2/32, Anush Polonnowita 2/26, Nethwin Dharmarathne 2/78, Ovina Ambanpola 3/24) 

Royal

50 for no loss in 15 overs (Sanvindu Seneratharachchi 30n.o.) 

 Thurstan strongly placed at Galle  

Scores: 

Mahinda 161 all out in 59.5 overs (Hareen Achintha 45, Pramesh Madhubashana 39; Thanuga Palihawadana 7/34)

Thurstan

142 for 2 in 40 overs (Ramika Sonal 20, Thanuga Palihawadana 27, Shanikya Deshapriya 54n.o., Thenuka Dewapriya 30n.o.; Arosha Udayanga 2/24) 

St. Thomas’ Matara amass 378 against St. Sylvester’s at Boyagane

Scores; 

St. Thomas’

378 for 7 in 100 overs  (Ochintha Chamika 63, Pesandu Sanjana 64, Jimuth Iddamalgoda 136n.o., Senura Perera 61n.o.; Isuru Gunasekara 2/35, K.S. Bandara 2/95) 



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‘Best time to crush’ Australia, says Oman captain Jatinder Singh

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Oman are hoping to get more exposure for their players in franchise leagues [Cricinfo]

Oman have suffered three heavy defeats to Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, and Ireland at the 2026 T20 World Cup, and had been thumped by Australia the only other time these two teams met, at the 2024 edition. But captain Jatinder Singh says his team sees their final match of this tournament as an opportunity to surprise a wounded Australia team.

Australia have nothing to gain from the match against Oman in Pallekele on Friday, aside from preserving some pride. Perhaps the gloom around the Australia camp will give Oman an opening. In fact it might be “the best time to crush them”.

“One hundred percent this is an opportunity,” Jatinder said. “And our boys are looking forward to it. Because T20 is a game of momentum and the moments, and if you play those moments right, you can do anything on that particular day. Australia is not doing well at the moment… it is the best time to crush them.

“The boys are really positive. They are looking forward to the match against Australia to make their mark.”

On how to make Oman more competitive in the long term, Jatinder believed franchise cricket opportunities for Oman players could be one route. Oman did not have a heavy cricket schedule in 2025, playing only 15 T20Is that year in addition to eight ODIs.

“Well if I have to sum up how Oman can improve, it would be if we have the franchise cricket happening in the country or our guys get a chance to play franchise cricket elsewhere,” Jatinder said. “I think we can fill that gap and they can bring vast amount of experience for our national team.

“But if we don’t get to play competitive cricket, whereas other teams are getting to play the competitive cricket, we will need to fill that gap. There have been instances where we’ve been inviting the teams to come and play in Oman. The response has been really delayed, or we don’t get any response. So I think if we have the franchise cricket, that would really fill the gap.”

[Cricinfo]

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Vanquished Australia eye winning end to dreadful World Cup campaign

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Steve Smith flew all the way to Sri Lanka as a replacement player, so he's likely to get a go [Cricbuzz]
In an alternate world, Australia would have been running final system checks in their last group game against Oman on February 20 before stepping into the world of Super Eights with a favourites tag in tow. But reality hasn’t matched the lofty pre-tournament expectation, and has them packing bags and bracing themselves for a damning introspection.

It’s jarring to see Australia being left behind in a white-ball World Cup – a blot in their enviable, unmatched heritage. But that said, they’ve failed to make the semis of five of the last six T20 World Cups – a complete reversal in fortunes from the 50-over tournament.

Amid accusations of not taking it too seriously, losing key players to injuries and retirement and a sharp assessment from Ricky Ponting,  a former World Cup winner from their shores, Mitchell Marsh & Co. have to drag themselves to the middle one last time before being homeward bound. You could argue there’s nothing riding on this game other than serving another reminder of Australia’s fallacies and you’d be right. But Australia will want to believe that a win as a final act brings some peace with it, and the consolation of finishing third – just outside of the two qualifiers.

Oman, meanwhile, got to Sri Lanka in search of a memorable evening at the very least where they could upset the apple-cart. They’ve gone 0 for 3 so far, but there will be murmurs in their camp of setting out in search of it again, against the vulnerable former champions.

There’s predicted thunderstorms one hour into the fixture. If rain stays away, there should be big runs on offer. The only other 7 pm start here saw Australia post 181 and Sri Lanka chase it down with two overs to spare.

Steve Smith flew all the way to Sri Lanka as a replacement player, so he’s likely to get a go in the final game of the tournament for the Aussies.

Oman made a couple of changes in the last two fixtures without success. Shakeel Ahmed went in and out of the side in the three games, but picked three wickets against Ireland and should keep his place. Jatinder might look at giving top-order batter Karan Sonavale another go.

Australia Probable XI: Mitchell Marsh (c), Steve Smith, Cameron Green, Tim David, Josh Inglis (wk), Marcus Stoinis, Matt Renshaw, Cooper Connolly, Xavier Bartlett, Nathan Ellis, Adam Zampa

Oman Probable XI: Aamir Kaleem, Jatinder Singh (c), Hammad Mirza, Ashish Odedara/Karan Sonavale, Mohammad Nadeem, Jiten Ramanandi, Vinayak Shukla (wk), Nadeem Khan, Sufyan Mehmood, Shah Faisal, Shakeel Ahmed

[Cricbuzz]

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Zimbabwe stun Sri Lanka and storm into Super Eight

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Pathum Nissanka’s half-century wasn’t enough to take Sri Lanka over the line at RPS last night.

Zimbabwe marched into the Super Eight stage of the T20 World Cup with the swagger of a side that refuses to read the script, completing the group phase unbeaten after a polished six-wicket win over co-hosts Sri Lanka at Colombo’s R. Premadasa Stadium on Thursday.

Ranked 11th in the world, the African side have been the tournament’s disruptors-in-chief. Having already sent former champions Australia packing last week, they now added 2014 winners Sri Lanka to their growing list of scalps, underlining that this is no flash in the pan but a team riding a serious wave of momentum.

Chasing 179 on a surface that demanded both muscle and method, Zimbabwe found themselves at crossroads when 65 were needed off the last 36 balls. Enter Sikandar Raza, sleeves rolled up and eyes locked in.

The all-rounder flipped the contest on its head in one decisive over from Dushan Hemantha, plundering 20 runs with two towering sixes and a rasping boundary. In the blink of an eye, the asking rate dipped and Sri Lanka’s shoulders sagged.

Raza and Brian Bennett stitched together a match-defining 69 off 40 deliveries for the third wicket, mixing clean ball-striking with smart running between the wickets. Zimbabwe crossed the line with three balls to spare.

While Raza provided the late fireworks with 45 off 26 balls, peppered with two fours and four sixes, opener Bennett was the glue that held the innings together. His composed 63 off 48 deliveries, studded with eight fours, ensured Zimbabwe never lost sight of the target.

Even when Raza departed with 13 still required from two overs, Sri Lanka sensed a sniff. But Tony Munyonga calmly clubbed Maheesh Theekshana’s first delivery of the final over into the stands, draining the tension from the contest. Fittingly, Bennett sealed the deal with the winning boundary. Raza was named Man of the Match.

It was Zimbabwe’s second-highest successful run chase in T20Is.

Earlier, after opting to bat, Sri Lanka were once again anchored by Pathum Nissanka. Fresh from becoming the tournament’s first centurion earlier in the week, Nissanka produced a polished 62 off 47 balls, bringing up his seventh T20 World Cup half-century, equalling Mahela Jayawardene’s record for the most by a Sri Lankan.

He and Kusal Perera gave the innings early impetus with a brisk 54 off 30 balls for the opening stand before Nissanka added a further 46 in 43 deliveries alongside Kusal Mendis.

Pavan Rathnayake provided the late thrust, clearing the ropes twice in a 44 off 25 balls as Sri Lanka posted a competitive 178.

Zimbabwe’s bowlers, however, ensured it was a chaseable target rather than a daunting one. Veteran leg-spinner Graeme Cremer led the way with 2-27, applying the squeeze in the middle overs, while the towering Blessing Muzarabani struck twice to finish with 2-38.

Sri Lanka now turn their attention to a Super Eight showdown against England in Kandy on Sunday, a contest that promises high stakes and little margin for error. Zimbabwe, brimming with belief, head to Bombay to face the West Indies on Monday, no longer the underdogs but a side that has earned its place at the top table.

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