Sports
Arya and Connolly power unbeaten Punjab Kings to NRR-boosting win
After cruising through two 200-plus chases and easing past 196 without fuss, Punjab Kings faced a different challenge on Sunday against Lucknow Super Giants, of setting a target for the first time this season. And on a fresh New Chandigarh surface, they responded in style.
Priyansh Arya and Cooper Connolly powered PBKS to 254, the highest total of IPL 2026 – they upstaged Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s 249 against Chennai Super Kings. LSG never got close, and PBKS’ 54-run win extended their unbeaten run to six matches.
LSG, meanwhile, slumped to a third straight loss to slip to No. 8, with only Kolkata Knight Riders – who notched up their first win of the season earlier in the day – and Mumbai Indians – who play Gujarat Titans on Monday – behind them.
Mohammed Shami’s bolt-upright seam and late movement had Prabhsimran Singh nicking to slip for a golden duck in the first over. In the second, Mohsin Khan should have had Connolly twice. First, LSG let go the possibility of an lbw review; replays confirmed three reds as Connolly was beaten attempting to flick an in-ducker. One ball later, Mohsin missed a simple return chance on his follow-through.
Three overs, 40 runs. Those were Mohsin’s powerplay figures in his comeback game. Much of the early damage was done by Arya, who hit him for four sixes – all to different points on the leg side, off short balls aimed into the body. This helped him race to 40 off 13 in the powerplay, and to his half-century in 19 balls.
The standout aspect of Arya’s game was his awareness. He was brutal in front of square with the pull, a mark of how quickly he was picking the length. At one point, just after the powerplay, LSG had four fielders patrolling the leg-side boundary, from long-on to deep backward square leg. Arya responded by walking across his stumps to paddle left-arm spinner M Siddharth past short fine leg.
At 110 for 1 in 10 overs, Pant turned to Shami for a second spell and Connolly welcomed him with two sixes. He had begun slowly, scoring just 41 off his first 32 balls, but now he was in a punishing mood. When Shami went short, he pulled him ferociously in front of square. And when he went slower and fuller, Connolly teed off, straight over his head.
Connolly was audacious too, such as when he exposed all three stumps and got down low to scoop Avesh Khan over short fine leg. His blockbuster act of the night was to come soon after, when he hit Aiden Markram for three back-to-back sixes in his only over, which cost 32. By the end of the 13th over, PBKS had hit 16 sixes; nine by Arya and seven by Connolly.
At the 13-over mark, PBKS were already 179 for 1 and going at nearly 14 an over. The next three overs, however, only brought 17 runs. Prince Yadav, who would end the night with remarkable figures read 4-0-25-2 (the rest travelled for 226 off 16 overs) began the fightback, dismissing Connolly with a hard-length delivery that he sliced to short third, breaking a 182-run stand for the second wicket.
Siddharth dismissed Arya two balls later when an ice-cool Mitchell Marsh held his composure to make a tough catch at long-off look simple. LSG truly seemed to have come back into the game when Mohsin had Shreyas Iyer edging to short third while looking to force the pace in a three-run 16th over. A late blitz from Marcus Stoinis, however, helped PBKS hit 40 off the last three overs, as they eventually got past 250; seven overs went for 15 or more, with three passing the 20 mark.
PBKS walloped 21 sixes, the most in an innings yet this season.
After Rishabh Pant-Markram and Markram-Marsh, LSG opened with Ayush Badoni and Marsh, and they only scored 12 off the first two overs. It spoke of the magnitude of LSG’s task that even 49 off the next four overs, which gave them a powerplay score of 61 for 1 seemed inadequate.
Vyshak Vijaykumar provided the early breakthrough when he dismissed Badoni for 35. Pant hit two sixes off his first three balls, but was reined in expertly by Vyshak and Yuzvendra Chahal. Vyshak stuck to his strengths of bowling the wide yorker and slower deliveries that Pant couldn’t get away, and all that pressure led to Marsh holing out as Chahal struck for the first time in three games. Then Pant fell soon after, LSG slipping to 128 for 4 in the 13th.
The freefall continued with Nicholas Pooran next to go, extending his horror run to six games. Some big hits from Markram merely reduced the margin of defeat. A series of drops late in the innings from Shashank Singh and Prabhsimran were minor blips in yet another dominant PBKS win, which set their campaign up with a great chance of finishing in the top two.
Brief scores:
Punjab Kings 254 for 7 in 20 overs (Priyansh Arya 93, Cooper Connolly 87, Marcus Stoinis 29, Nehal Wadhera 13, Shashnak Singh 17; Mohammed Shami 1-56, Moshin Khan 1-43, Prince Yadav 2-25, Manimaran Siddharth 2-35) beat Lucknow Super Giants 200 for 5 in 20 overs (Mitchell Marsh 40, Ayush Badoni 35, Risbah Pant 43, Aiden Markram 42*, Mukul Choudhary 21*; Arsshdeep Singh 1-41, Marco Jansen 2-37, Vijayakumar Vyshak 1-30, Yuzvendra Chahal 1-36) by 54 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Tennekoon calls for bold captains
Time was when Sri Lanka used to produce captains who were admired across the world; leaders who were ahead of their time and commanded respect wherever the game was played. In the early years of the IPL, several Sri Lankans were entrusted with franchise captaincy roles and they handled those responsibilities with distinction.
In recent years, however, captains in this part of the world have often been appointed more on seniority than exceptional leadership qualities. The roots of the problem may well lie in school cricket itself. From Under-13 level onwards, you often see captains being shouted instructions ball-by-ball from the boundary line. Coaches are effectively captaining sides from the dressing room and that is hardly a healthy phenomenon.
The issue came into sharp focus recently when Sri Lanka Cricket acknowledged that measures need to be taken to educate school coaches. Sunday Island spoke to former Sri Lanka captain Anura Tennekoon, who had some fascinating views on the subject.
Tennekoon captained Sri Lanka in the 1975 and 1979 World Cups and is regarded as one of the finest batsmen produced by the country. He also served the game in several administrative capacities, functioning as selector, national team manager, Secretary of the Board and CEO of Sri Lanka Cricket.
“You can’t develop captains overnight. You have to let them take decisions, make mistakes and then learn from them. I have seen coaches sending down instructions after every ball from the boundary rope and it is extremely disappointing to watch. This is not how you develop leaders,” Tennekoon told Sunday Island.
“You have to monitor the system. Maybe you ask the umpires to keep an eye on things or appoint observers. Maybe you deduct points if it keeps happening after a warning. If it still continues, then you take drastic measures,” Tennekoon added.
The former captain felt the development of young leaders would be severely hindered if coaches continued to make most of the decisions from the dressing room.
“Coaches themselves are under pressure because if they don’t win games, their jobs are at stake. But preventing captains from developing is a very serious issue,” Tennekoon said.
“There were hardly any coaches during our time. There was only a master-in-charge who looked after discipline and coached us and gave advice when required. The captain handled all the planning and execution with some support from the vice-captain and senior players. Games were far more interesting because captains made bold declarations in pursuit of outright victories. You hardly see that anymore.”
“You need captains brave enough to take decisions. Even if you lose, that’s fine because captains learn valuable lessons from defeat. Today, the first instinct seems to be to secure a draw. Winning becomes secondary. The approach now is safety first and if an opportunity to win comes later, then perhaps you go for it.”
Tennekoon recalled a recent big match where one side was heavily favoured while the opposition were rank underdogs.
“But cricket is a funny game and things don’t always go according to script. The underdogs were on top and had a genuine chance to win. Yet they still settled for a draw because they wanted to play safe. If you play three-day cricket or even five-day cricket with that mindset, you are inevitably going to end up with dull draws. It feels as if losing a game is treated as the end of the world and that is rubbish,” he remarked.
“You should teach young cricketers to play with positive intent. If you approach cricket negatively, the game becomes boring. Neither the players nor the spectators will enjoy it. You should never kill the spirit of this great game.”
Sri Lanka Cricket’s current administration appears keen to address the issue. This week, the board invited all Division One and Division Two school coaches for a workshop conducted by Head Coach Garry Kirsten. More such sessions are expected to be held regularly.
“I am very happy with the appointment of Eran Wickramaratne to head cricket. He has a proven track record in many fields and is deeply passionate about the game. I am also pleased to see three former cricketers, who are respected globally, involved in the process. I am confident they will put structures in place that can deliver results.”
“We need to give them time and support them wholeheartedly if we want to see meaningful change,” Tennekoon concluded.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Everything in life is a conspiracy for Pramodya
Even before the public could fully grasp the reasons behind his removal as Chairman of Selectors, Pramodya Wickramasinghe was back in the headlines, armed with yet another batch of conspiracy theories, this time over Sri Lanka’s squad for the West Indies tour. Conspiracy theories, of course, are not exactly unfamiliar territory for the former medium pacer. And make no mistake, there will be plenty more down the road. But what Pramodya says these days needs to be taken not merely with a pinch of salt, but perhaps with the entire salt shaker.
For much of the last decade, Pramodya has hovered around selection committees, most often as chairman. He presided over Sri Lanka’s disastrous 2023 World Cup campaign in India and was promptly shown the door. Under Upul Tharanga, the team at least appeared to be moving in the right direction. Then, just as another World Cup loomed around the corner, Pramodya made a dramatic return to centre stage. What followed was absolute mayhem.
The captain was removed. Combinations were shuffled like a deck of cards at a casino. Communication was non-existent. And Sri Lanka ended up making a complete mockery of a World Cup campaign where, as co-hosts, they were expected to reach the semi-finals. Instead, the whole thing resembled a reality show with no script and too many directors.
Interestingly, while the current selection panel has largely retained the squads picked by Pramodya’s committee, they have appointed Kamindu Mendis as vice-captain, a move that actually makes cricketing sense, which in itself must feel refreshing to Sri Lankan fans.
Kamindu is among the few genuine all-format players Sri Lanka possess at present and grooming him gradually for leadership is sensible planning rather than throwing darts blindfolded and hoping one lands on the board.
Pramodya’s claim that they were grooming Dunith Wellalage for leadership ahead of the next World Cup fits neatly alongside several of his other selection decisions; baffling and difficult to explain with a straight face.
There is no doubt Dunith possesses leadership qualities and may well captain Sri Lanka one day. But there is one rather inconvenient detail. He is not yet a certainty in the playing eleven. Furthermore, the next World Cup will be played in South Africa, where conditions traditionally favour seam-bowling all-rounders rather than spin-bowling all-rounders. One wonders whether Wellalage will even make the final squad of 15 for those conditions. So much for long-term vision and cricketing acumen.
There was a time when respected former cricketers politely declined invitations to become selectors, understanding the role required restraint, balance and clarity of thought. Under the current administration, however, there appears to be renewed enthusiasm among stakeholders to genuinely rebuild the game and both Sri Lanka Cricket and the Sports Ministry deserve credit for bringing in a fresh selection panel.
The task ahead is hardly straightforward. Together with Head Coach Gary Kirsten, they now have the responsibility of dragging Sri Lankan cricket back onto the right track after years of confusion, inconsistency and self-inflicted wounds.
It is also encouraging to see respected cricketing minds like Kumar Sangakkara, Roshan Mahanama and Sidath Wettimuny coming together to help steer the game forward. Cheap shots from individuals like Pramodya, who, frankly, has been part of the problem rather than the solution, should not distract from the rebuilding process now underway.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Unbeaten giants set stage for an explosive second round
Following five weeks of high-octane schoolboy rugby, the Dialog Schools U19 Rugby League 2026 has officially concluded its thrilling first round. The final group standings have paved the way for a highly competitive second round, dividing the country’s leading rugby-playing schools into the Cup, Plate and Bowl Championships beginning in June.
In Group 1, Trinity College emerged as the most dominant outfit in the tournament, completing an unbeaten campaign with five wins from five matches. They topped the table with a maximum 30 points and an impressive points difference of +190. Isipathana College comfortably secured second place with 24 points.
Group 2 saw another unbeaten run, this time from St. Peter’s College, who finished on top with 29 points. Wesley College followed in second place with 24 points to confirm their place among the Cup Championship contenders.
The closest battle came in Group 3 where Zahira College and Royal College finished level on points with identical 4-1 records and 25 points each, setting up an exciting second round in the Cup segment.
Second round promises fireworks,
The Cup Championship will feature Trinity, Isipathana, St. Peter’s, Wesley, Zahira and Royal in a round-robin contest to determine the country’s top school rugby side.
The Plate Championship will feature S. Thomas’ College, St. Joseph’s College, Ananda College, Thurstan College, Sri Sumangala College and St. Anthony’s College.
The Bowl Championship will include Kingswood College, DS Senanayake College, Science College, Mahanama College, Prince of Wales College and Lumbini College.
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